Semiconductor memory device and structure

ABSTRACT

A semiconductor device, including: a plurality of non-volatile memory cells including a first memory cell and a second memory cell, where the plurality of non-volatile memory cells includes source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines, at least one of the source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines are shared by the first memory cell and the second memory cell, where the first memory cell includes a thin tunneling oxide of less than 1 nm thickness, and where the second memory cell includes a thick tunneling oxide of greater than 2 nm thickness.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention

This application relates to the general field of Integrated Circuit (IC) devices and fabrication methods, and more particularly to NOR architecture non volatile Memory Circuit (NOR-Memory) devices and fabrication methods.

2. Discussion of Background Art

Over the past 40 years, one has seen a dramatic increase in functionality and performance of Integrated Circuits (ICs). This has largely been due to the phenomenon of “scaling” i.e. component sizes within ICs have been reduced (“scaled”) with every successive generation of technology.

Memory technology has enjoyed this trend, but now the gains of scaling have slowed and almost stopped. Hence, increases in memory capacity and performance have virtually stalled. There is a need to provide continuing increases in memory capacity and performance.

One way to tackle this is to increase the number of bits per memory cell, effectively increasing the capacity without increasing production cost.

As well, integration of logic and memory needs to be improved, as current methods suffer a high energy cost and large time latency during memory fetches. Over the past 40 years, there has been a dramatic increase in functionality and performance of Integrated Circuits (ICs). This has largely been due to the phenomenon of “scaling”; i.e., component sizes such as lateral and vertical dimensions within ICs have been reduced (“scaled”) with every successive generation of technology. There are two main classes of components in Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) ICs, namely transistors and wires. With “scaling”, transistor performance and density typically improve and this has contributed to the previously-mentioned increases in IC performance and functionality. However, wires (interconnects) that connect together transistors degrade in performance with “scaling”. The situation today is that wires dominate the performance, functionality and power consumption of ICs.

3D stacking of semiconductor devices or chips is one avenue to tackle the wire issues. By arranging transistors in 3 dimensions instead of 2 dimensions (as was the case in the 1990s), the transistors in ICs can be placed closer to each other. This reduces wire lengths and keeps wiring delay low.

There are many techniques to construct 3D stacked integrated circuits or chips including:

-   -   Through-silicon via (TSV) technology: Multiple layers of         transistors (with or without wiring levels) can be constructed         separately. Following this, they can be bonded to each other and         connected to each other with through-silicon vias (TSVs).     -   Monolithic 3D technology: With this approach, multiple layers of         transistors and wires can be monolithically constructed. Some         monolithic 3D and 3DIC approaches are described in U.S. Pat.         Nos. 8,273,610, 8,557,632, 8,298,875, 8,642,416, 8,362,482,         8,378,715, 8,379,458, 8,450,804, 8,574,929, 8,581,349,         8,642,416, 8,687,399, 8,742,476, 8,674,470, 8,803,206,         8,902,663, 8,994,404, 9,021,414, 9,023,688, 9,030,858,         9,117,749, 9,219,005; PCT application PCT/US16/52726; U.S.         patent publication 2011/0092030; and U.S. patent applications,         Ser. Nos. 62/077,280, 62/042,229, 13/803,437, 61/932,617,         14/607,077, 14/642,724, 62/139,636, 62/149,651, 62/198,126,         62/239,931, 62/246,054, 62/307,568, 62/297,857, 15/095,187,         15/150,395, 15/173,686, 62/383,463, and 15/243,941. The entire         contents of the foregoing patents, publications, and         applications are incorporated herein by reference.     -   Electro-Optics: There is also work done for integrated         monolithic 3D including layers of different crystals, such as         U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,283,215, 8,163,581, 8,753,913, 8,823,122,         9,197,804; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/461,539. The         entire contents of the foregoing patents, publications, and         applications are incorporated herein by reference.

In a land mark papers at VLSI 2007 and IEDM 2007, Toshiba presented techniques to construct 3D memories which they called—BiCS. Many of the memory vendors followed that work by variation and alternatives mostly for non-volatile memory applications, such as now being referred to as 3D-NAND. They provide an important manufacturing advantage of being able to utilize one, usually ‘critical’, lithography step for the patterning of multiple layers. The vast majority of these 3D Memory schemes use poly-silicon for the active memory cell channel which suffers from higher cell to cell performance variations and lower drive than a cell with a monocrystalline channel. In at least our U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,026,521, 8,114,757, 8,687,399, 8,379,458, and 8,902,663, these are incorporated herein by reference, we presented multiple 3D memory structures generally constructed by successive layer transfers using ion cut techniques. In this work we are presenting multiple methods and structures to construct 3D memory with monocrystalline channels constructed by alternative methods to ion cut and successive layer transfers. This structure provides the benefit of multiple layers being processed by one lithography step with many of the benefits of a monocrystalline channel, and provides overall lower construction costs.

In addition U.S. patent applications 62/208,812, 62/215,112, 62/221,618, 62/246,054, 62/266,610, 62/271,251, 62/276,953 and 62/286,362 are incorporated herein by reference.

SUMMARY

In one aspect, a semiconductor device, including: a plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprising a first memory cell and a second memory cell, wherein said plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprises source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines, at least one of said source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines are shared by said first memory cell and said second memory cell, wherein said first memory cell comprises a thin tunneling oxide of less than 1 nm thickness, and wherein said second memory cell comprises a thick tunneling oxide of greater than 2 nm thickness.

In another aspect, a semiconductor device, including: a plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprising a first memory cell and a second memory cell, wherein said plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprises source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines, at least one of said source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines are shared by said first memory cell and said second memory cell, wherein at least one region of one of said drain diffusion lines comprises a junction less transistor (“JLT”).

In another aspect, a semiconductor device, including: a plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprising a first memory cell and a second memory cell, wherein said plurality of non-volatile memory cells comprises source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines, at least one of said source diffusion lines and drain diffusion lines are shared by said first memory cell and said second memory cell, wherein said first memory cell comprises a transistor channel, said transistor channel has two independent facets, wherein each of said two independent facets comprise at least one independent storage site.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Various embodiments of the invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:

FIGS. 1A-1B are example schematics of prior art NOR and NAND non-volatile (NV) memory;

FIGS. 1C and 1D are example schematics of a new HD-NOR non-volatile (NV) memory bit cell and exemplary small array;

FIGS. 2A-2K are example illustrations of processing and forming 2D HD-NOR array structures;

FIGS. 3A-3D are example illustrations of an alternative processing and formation of 2D HD-NOR array structures;

FIG. 4 illustrates known in the art alternatives for low cost grid patterning;

FIGS. 5A and 5B are example illustrations one memory cell basic structure;

FIG. 6 is a table of exemplary write, erase or read conditions for the memory cell of FIGS. 5A and 5B;

FIG. 7 is an example illustration of another memory cell basic structure;

FIG. 8 is a table of exemplary write, erase or read conditions for the memory cell of FIG. 7;

FIG. 9 is an example illustration of another memory cell basic structure;

FIG. 10 is a table of exemplary write, erase or read conditions for the memory cell of FIG. 9;

FIG. 11 is an example illustration of a memory structure with a bottom gate;

FIG. 12 is an example illustration of another memory cell basic structure;

FIGS. 13A and 13B are tables of exemplary write, erase or read conditions for the memory cell of FIG. 12;

FIGS. 14A-14C are example illustrations of building blocks for the HD-NOR peripheral circuits;

FIG. 15 is an example illustration of an exemplary architecture of a HD-NOR array;

FIGS. 16A-16E are example illustrations of the formation of an M-SOI wafer and finished structures;

FIGS. 16F-16J are example illustrations of the formation of an M-bulk wafer and finished structures;

FIGS. 17A-17E are example illustrations of the use of a memory substrate and integration with logic structures.

FIGS. 18A and 18B are example illustrations of the formation of a porous layered donor wafer;

FIG. 19 is an example illustration of the general top-level flow of the ELTRAN process;

FIGS. 20A-20G are example illustrations of the formation of HD-NOR structures;

FIG. 21 is an example illustration of a channel with a facet holding 8 bits;

FIG. 22 is an example illustration of operating conditions for the cell of FIG. 21;

FIG. 23 is an example illustration of a memory addressing format;

FIGS. 24A-24B are example illustrations of block diagrams of circuit control circuits;

FIG. 25 is an example illustration of focusing the trapping region to a zone of charge trapping region;

FIG. 26 is an additional example illustration of focusing the trapping region to a zone of charge trapping region;

FIG. 27 is an example illustration of reading a zone of charge trapping region;

FIG. 28 is an example illustration of a block erase operation on a zone of charge trapping region;

FIG. 29A-29B are example illustrations of block diagrams of circuits to generate signals;

FIGS. 30A-30E are example illustrations of logic use of the HD-NOR fabric;

FIGS. 31A-31E are example illustrations of additional logic use of the HD-NOR fabric;

FIGS. 32A-32C are example illustrations of customizing the HD-NOR fabric to support programmable logic;

FIGS. 33A-33F are example illustrations of customizing the HD-NOR fabric to support programmable logic;

FIGS. 34A-34B are example illustrations of 4 bit Look-Up-Tables and LUT4 with the additional input drivers;

FIG. 35 is an example illustration of implementing a LUT4 in the HD-NOR fabric;

FIG. 36 is an example illustration of Domino logic;

FIG. 37A is an example illustration of prior art Programmable logic array PLA structure;

FIGS. 37B-37E are example illustrations of implementing a PLA in an HD-NOR fabric;

FIGS. 38A-38D are example illustrations of additional NAND memory added to a HD-NOR structure;

FIGS. 39A-39N are example illustrations of another method of NAND memory added to a HD-NOR structure;

FIGS. 40A-40D are example illustrations of the formation and structure of a double layer NOR;

FIGS. 41A-41E are example illustrations of the formation and structure of a double layer NOR on porous cut enabled substrate;

FIGS. 42A and 42B example illustrations of the formation and structure of an alternative advanced substrate;

FIG. 43 is an example illustration of an HD NOR cell formed as a programmable via;

FIG. 44 is an example illustration of operating states for an HD NOR cell programmable via;

FIGS. 45A-45D are example illustrations programming conditions of an HD NOR cell programmable via;

FIG. 46 is an example illustration a base structure of an HD NOR cell formation;

FIGS. 47A-47F are example illustrations of formation of an HD NOR cell programmable via;

FIGS. 48A-48C are example illustrations of fine vertical connectivity using HD NOR cell programmable vias;

FIGS. 49A-49D are example illustrations of forming a multi strata device;

FIG. 50 is an example illustration of a memory addressing format;

FIGS. 51A-51C are example illustrations of block diagrams of circuit control circuits;

FIGS. 52A-52B are example illustrations of block diagrams of circuits to generate signals;

FIGS. 53A-53F are example illustrations of the formation and structure of a Checkerboard Fabric;

FIGS. 54A-54B are example illustrations of operation of transistors;

FIG. 55 is an example illustration of an alternative implementation for Look-Up-Table (LUT) utilizing programmable vias;

FIGS. 56A-56B are example illustrations of the use of the Checker board Fabric which could result in a LUT4;

FIGS. 57A-57B are example illustrations of 4 bit Look-Up-Tables and LUT4 with a PMOS half-latch;

FIGS. 58A-58E are example illustrations of a programmable logic PLA/PLD which could be adapted for full signal reconstruction utilizing the programmable Checker board Fabric;

FIG. 59 is an example illustration of a programmable 2 product term of two inputs with output;

FIG. 60 is an example illustration of a table for the programming of the two NAND rows of FIG. 59 to support LUT-2 functionality;

FIG. 61 is an example illustration of the complementary programmable function of the structure in FIG. 59;

FIG. 62 is an example illustration of a similar function as in FIG. 59 for three inputs and their complement and with 4 NOR terms;

FIGS. 63A-63F are example illustrations of an alternative formation method and structure of a Checkerboard Fabric.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

An embodiment or embodiments of the invention is now described with reference to the drawing figures. Persons of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the description and figures illustrate rather than limit the invention and that in general the figures are not drawn to scale for clarity of presentation. Such skilled persons will also realize that many more embodiments are possible by applying the inventive principles contained herein and that such embodiments fall within the scope of the invention which is not to be limited except by the appended claims.

Memory cells could be constructed with conventional N type or P type transistors where the channel doping may be of opposite type with respect to the source drain doping or the memory cell could utilize a junction-less transistor construction where the gate could fully deplete the channel when in the off-state. For some architectures, the junction-less transistor is attractive as it may take less processing steps (or provide other device advantages such a low leakage off-state) to form the memory array without the need to form a change in doping along the transistor.

Some drawing figures may describe process flows for building devices. The process flows, which may be a sequence of steps for building a device, may have many structures, numerals and labels that may be common between two or more adjacent steps. In such cases, some labels, numerals and structures used for a certain step's figure may have been described in the previous steps' figures.

This application incorporates by reference herein the previous related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/874,366, 62/252,448, 62/258,433 and 62/269,950 by the same inventors.

Memory architectures include at least two important types—NAND and NOR. FIG. 1A is a schematic illustration of prior art NOR architecture. FIG. 1B is a schematic illustration of prior art NAND architecture. As illustrated in NOR architecture the memory control lines, bit-lines and word-lines, provide direct access to each memory cell and accordingly quick access. The drawback is the extra area for the contact for each cell resulting in an overall larger area per bit for such architecture.

In contrast the NAND architecture illustrated in FIG. 1B connects memory cells in a daisy chain with source or drain (S/D) contact only at the two ends of the chain. To control a specific cell within the chain all the gates of the other cells in the chain would need to be set to an ‘on’ state so the signal provided at the chain edge reaches the specific cell within the chain to read or write. NAND architectures require a smaller area per cell than NOR, but would require more time to access an individual cell.

Currently the market has made a clear choice, choosing reducing bit cost even if it results in a much longer memory access.

As illustrated in FIG. 1C, a schematic of a bit cell 100 of a new NOR architecture which provides both high speed access and high density—HD-NOR—is shown. The new NOR architecture and bit cell 100 leverage a new class of 3D transistor which maybe formed on many substrates, for example, bulk or SOI wafers. The bit-lines or source lines, first bit/source line 102 and second bit/source line 104, may be formed from N+ silicon strips, which may also act as the individual cell source or drain (S/D). The bit line or source lines are versatile; for example, when one line first bit/source line 102 acts as bit line, another line second bit/source line 104 becomes a source line. Also, the bit line and source line swapping may be used to implement mirror bit operation. In between first bit/source line 102 and second bit/source line 104 may be disposed p type channel 106. Gate 108, which could be made with doped polysilicon for example, going in the vertical direction (substantially orthogonal to bit lines) may function as the word-lines. FIG. 1D illustrates an exemplary small memory array constructed from such a bit-cell.

The architecture referred to by naming as HD-NOR and illustrated herein in reference to FIG. 1C to 3D and in similar illustrations herein is also similar to a structure called in the art AND nonvolatile memory architecture as presented in a patent such as U.S. Pat. No. 7,414,889, and as 1T MONOS as in a paper by Hidenori Mitani et al titled “A 90 nm Embedded 1T-MONOS Flash Macro for Automotive Applications . . . ” presented at ISSCC 2016, both incorporated herein by reference.

FIG. 2A to FIG. 2J will be used to illustrate exemplary fabrication steps for processing and forming an HD-NOR array.

FIG. 2A illustrates a structure of a small portion of an exemplary HD-NOR in a fabrication process. The base silicon may be, for example, a P− doped bulk or an SOI substrate. The base silicon may be patterned with strips of implant masking regions 200 such as silicon oxide to keep the strips under it as P regions 202 (nominally the original P concentration of the base silicon, but may be modified as known in the art via, for example, ion implantation) while the non implant-mask strips in between the strips of implant masking regions 200 may be ion-implanted to form N+ regions 204. Other doping methods, for example, gas phase or solid phase diffusion may be used. These N+ strips of N+ regions 204 may serve as the bit line(s) in one direction, BL direction 206, and also as the future bit cell's source or drain (S/D). The word-lines will be formed later going in an orthogonal direction to BL direction 206, such as WL direction 208. The bulk of the substrate is not shown to simply the drawing.

FIG. 2B illustrates the structure after covering the structure of FIG. 2A with a hard mask material 241 such as silicon nitride, which may be accomplished by a deposition. The hard mask material 241 may have sufficient etching selectivity in respect to the hard mask material 200.

FIG. 2C illustrates the structure after the hard mask material 241 had been polished down using, for example, Chemical Mechanical Polishing (CMP), or alternative process, to expose the implant masking strips 200 leaving the resultant hard mask material N+ protection regions 212 protecting the N+ regions 204. This results in self alignment of the N+ protection regions 212 to N+ regions 204.

FIG. 2D illustrates the structure after selectively removing the implant protection masking regions 200, leaving the P regions 202 exposed while the N+ regions 204 are still protected by N+ protection regions 212.

FIG. 2E illustrates the structure after deposition of an etch protection layer and patterning it to form orthogonal strips etch mask regions 215 such as silicon dioxide in the word-line direction.

FIG. 2F illustrates the structure after etching the unprotected portions of P regions 202, thus forming p-regions 222. This results in S/D strips (N-regions 204) going in the bit-line direction with fully isolated P regions 222 disposed in between these S/D strips. Effectively forming an array of Fin shaped channels placed periodically between strips of N+ silicon which serve as the future transistor S/Ds and also as the bit-lines. In one embodiment, the fin height can be from 10 nm to 100 nm, the fin width can be 10 nm to 100 nm. FIG. 2G illustrates the resulting structure at the silicon layer from a top view. The etch portions 229 of the P regions—the removed portion of the original P regions 202 P strips would function as isolations between bit cell channels 232, and as will be explained later, this removed portion will be used to accommodate the sidewall gate stack. The original N+ regions 204 strips would act as the bit cell S/D and also as the bit-lines 234.

FIG. 2H illustrates the structure after the side gate structures/stack for the array, which may include a gate dielectric by first a deposition of a Tunnel oxide then a Charge trap layer and then a control oxide layer. These three layers are commonly called O/N/O 224 layers, but may comprise other materials and combinations known in the art for charge trapping. For example, the charge trap layer may be semiconductor quantum dots or metallic quantum dots where these dot size ranges from 1 nm to 10 nm. Alternatively, the charge trap layer may be high-k dielectric such as HfO₂ or it nitride. For simplicity herein the term ONO or O/N/O would be used to denote structures which include a charge trap layer/region and support barrier layers/regions which may allow controlled transfer of charge into or out of the charge trap layer. Such O/N/O stack could comprise material described herein or other material combinations including materials that have been included in a review paper by Chun Zhao et al titled: “Review on Non-Volatile Memory with High-k Dielectrics: Flash for Generation Beyond 32 nm” published in Materials 2014, 7, 5117-5145; doi:10.3390/ma7075117, incorporated herein by reference. These layers could be deposited using Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) techniques or compatible alternative. Then the side gate material 225 such as polysilicon may be deposited using Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) techniques or compatible alternative. Then the structure may be polished down using CMP to expose the etch mask 221 (remainder of etch mask regions 215). Consequently, the gate materials are separated by the etch mask 221, and thus each sidewall channel of P regions 222 can be independently controlled by its sidewall gate 225. Thermal oxides, formed by a thermally activated reaction of oxygen or some form of oxygen (such as water), may result in unwanted redistribution of dopants or other materials within the device at the time of that thermal oxidation. One technique to overcome this would be to use radical oxidation for the formation of the tunneling oxide. For example, by a TEL SPA (slot plane antenna) tool/machine, wherein oxygen radicals are generated and utilized to form thin thermal oxides (generally of single crystal silicon) at less than 400 degC.

Alternatively thermal oxide could be grown on the P silicon before the step of FIG. 2A. Additional alternative is to defer the step of dopant activation to be done after the formation of the tunneling oxide and account for the thermal budget of all prior thermal processing steps.

FIG. 2I illustrates the structure after the selective removal of the exposed regions of the etch mask 221. In one embodiment of the present invention, the cell fabrication may be complete here and may continue to the interconnect process. As another embodiment of the present invention, the cell fabrication may be continued in the following process for a higher bit density by adding a top gate material.

FIG. 2J illustrates the structure after adding the top gates by first using a similar flow to FIG. 2H: which may include a gate dielectric by first a deposition of a Tunnel oxide then a Charge trap layer and then a control oxide layer—These three layers are commonly called O/N/O 226 layers, but may comprise other materials and combinations known in the art for charge trapping. For example, the charge trap layer may be semiconductor quantum dots or metallic quantum dots where these dot size ranges from 1 nm to 10 nm. Alternatively, the charge trap layer may be high-k dielectric such as HfO₂ or it nitride. In some cases a radical oxidation may be utilized. These layers could be deposited using Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) techniques or compatible alternative. Then the top gate material 227 such as polysilicon may be deposited using Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) techniques or compatible alternative. Then the structure may be polished down using CMP to expose the side gates 225.

FIG. 2K illustrates a small portion of the resultant structure. Using n for counting cells going along the word-lines and m for cell going along the bit-lines, the structure illustrates the cells and control lines around cell m,n. It shows top gate GLtop,m with two side gates on its sides: GLright side,m and GLleft side,m. The side gate left of cell m is also the right side gate for cell m+1. FIG. 3 also shows 5 sections of bit-lines which also serves as the S/D for the channel in between them.

An alternative flow is presented using illustrations FIGS. 3A-3D. FIG. 3A illustrates the structure illustrated in FIG. 2D. It could be desired to optimize the flow so that the N+ protection layer 302 remaining at this step is relatively thin, for example, about 10 angstroms, 20 angstroms, 30 angstroms, 50 angstroms, 100 angstroms or 200 angstroms.

FIG. 3B illustrates the structure of FIG. 3A after formation of the first O/N/O 310, top gates 312 and then forming and patterning hard mask 314 of strips in the Word Line (WL) direction.

FIG. 3C illustrates the structure of FIG. 3B after etching the unmasked gate, first O/N/O material and the unprotected P silicon.

FIG. 3D illustrates the structure of FIG. 3C after forming side O/N/O 322, 324 and side gates 323. And then CMP the structure, thus leaving a thin hard mask region 350 separating the side gates 323, and disposed underneath it the top gates 329 and the first O/N/O 328. Side O/N/O 322, 324 and side gates 323 may be disposed between p regions 355 and top gates 329.

FIG. 4 illustrates three known in the current art process flows for forming parallel running lines with low cost lithography providing high pattern resolution by smart process steps. It illustrates two types of pitch splitting techniques and one for spacer based technique. These techniques could be used for the processing of HD-NOR structure as its array flow is based on parallel lines substantially equally spaced.

When the HD-NOR structure is implemented, for example, on a silicon-on-insulator substrate, the HD-NOR structure could be dual use one providing effectively a universal memory. As illustrated in FIG. 5, every cell has a floating P channel 504 with N+ source and N drain 510 on its side, forming a known in the art SOI based floating body DRAM. Such dual function memory cell was described in a paper by Jin-Woo Han et. al. titled: “A Unified-RAM (URAM) Cell for Multi-Functioning Capacitorless DRAM and NVM”, published at IEEE IEDM 2007, incorporated herein by reference. These DRAM cells could further enhanced by adapting “Autonomous Refresh of Floating Body Cell (FBC)” techniques, which could be also called ‘self-refresh’. In a common DRAM refresh a refresh cycle means that each cell is being read and re-written individually. In a ‘self-refresh’ many or even all cells could be refreshed together by driving a specific current (may be a current range or minimum current, the value being determined by engineering choices) through them. The cell holding ‘zero’ will keep its zero state and the cell holding ‘one’ will get recharged to recover the loss of floating body charge due to leakage. This technique had been detailed in a paper by Takashi Ohsawa et. al. titled: “Autonomous Refresh of Floating Body Cell (FBC)” published in IEDM 2008, and in follow-up paper titled: “Autonomous Refresh of Floating-Body Cell due to Current Anomaly of Impact Ionization” published by IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 56, NO. 10, October 2009, the entirety of all the forgoing incorporated herein by reference.

In many cases the volatile operation could interfere with the non-volatile operation of the memory cells. So it is common to avoid using them together or in close proximity. A portion of the HD-NOR that is designated to be used as an FB-RAM would be programmed to have all its NV storage cells set to a known state such as all its bits being reset.

There are many use modes for such an enhanced memory, including, splitting the memory bank for volatile and non-volatile portions, power down with saving the volatile information into the non volatile portion, and sleep mode for power reductions by moving the volatile information into the non volatile portion.

Additional enhancement to such HD-NOR, is to implement MirrorBit® technology as was made commercial by Spansion for NOR products. And apply such approach to each of the independent O/N/O+ gates surrounding the given channel as is illustrated in FIG. 5A Similar techniques were presented for SOI-FinFET type NOR with 4 bits per cell as been detailed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,091,551, incorporated herein by reference.

FIG. 5B illustrates on top of the memory cell of FIG. 5A exemplary memory control lines for cell m,n. The lower bit-line 502 is labeled S/Dn, the higher bit-line 504 is labeled S/Dn+1. The top word-line 506 is labeled GLtop,m, the right side word-line 508 is labeled GLright side,m, and the left side word-line 509 is labeled GLleft side,m.

FIG. 6 provides a table for the exemplary write or read of each of the memory bits of a cell n,m which is between bit-line n and bit-line n+1, and having a word-line/top gate m, with reference to FIG. 5B.

The 8 v indicates a voltage just high enough to drive charge into the charge trap under its control.

The 4 v indicate about half of the 8 v which would access the read operation but would not be high enough to cause charge tunneling through and enabling charged being trapped or de-trapped.

Examining the table of FIG. 6 reveals that the charge trapping or reading may be performed solely with the gate controlling the specific side being in parallel with the facet of the channel. The other two gates may not be active at that moment. The absolute values of the voltages/biases in FIG. 6 (or any of the voltage/bias tables herein) may be adjusted due to engineering and design choices, as well as driven by material choices and doping types.

With this new memory structure a new form of memory enhancement could be applied. FIG. 7 illustrates an 8 bit memory arrangement. In this new technique the side gate helps split the top facet into a right side and a left side to double the storage capacity of the top facet. For a write operation, a voltage such as 4V or −4V applied to the supporting neighboring gates may direct the charge formation toward one side of the channel from an opposite side channel but would not be high enough to cause charge tunneling through the supporting gate side.

FIG. 8 provides a table for the exemplary write or read of each of the memory bits of a cell n,m which is between bit-line n and bit-line n+1, and having a word-line/top gate m, with reference to FIG. 7.

By using the left side gate to pull the charges to the left, the top gate can controllably write bit1 and bit2 and respectively erase them.

By using the right side gate to pull the charges to the right the top gate can controllably write bit3 and bit4 and respectively erase it.

Pushing the side control further we can increase the memory capacity of the top facet to 6 and the cell total to 10, as is illustrated in FIG. 9. It should be noted that the increased capacity of such an HD-NOR memory device could limit how small the size of the memory cell could be scaled. It is expected that each bit may need its own 20-30 nm region, which may be round, elliptical, etc., and may include an area which may range from 150 nm² to 800 nm², and a volume of 500 nm³ to 16,000 nm³. Accordingly the top facet could be kept larger than about 60 nm×40 nm.

FIG. 10 provides a table for the exemplary write or read of each of the memory bits of a cell n,m which is between bit-line n and bit-line n+1, and having a word-line/top gate m.

By using both the right side gate and the left side gate to push the charges away from the sides and into the middle of the top facet the top gate can controllably write bit3 and bit4 and respectively erase them.

This increase of the top facet bit capacity may be applied in the same for the side facet. To do so the structure needs a bottom gate.

FIG. 11 illustrates the memory structure 1150 (for example, similar to the memory structure of FIG. 2J) being formed with a bottom gate 1110 by having a portion of the SOI substrate 1000 doped, for example, by ion implantation, to form N+ regions for the areas designated under the HD-NOR, and adding access to control that region's electrical potential. The buried oxide (BOX) 1120 of such SOI or ultrathin buried oxide could be kept thin enough for such bottom gate to have good electrostatic control of the O/N/O of the relevant side facets of the memory cell. One skilled in the art would recognize that there may be other methods to achieve a bottom gate.

FIG. 12 illustrates the memory cell capacity allocation with a bottom gate added to the HD-NOR structure.

The table of FIG. 10 could be modified to provide the write read conditions for each side by replacing right and left side with top and bottom accordingly. The bits sited on top are marked 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 those on the right side are marked 1r, 2r, 3r, 4r, 5r, 6r, and not shown are those on the right side are marked 1l, 2l, 3l, 4l, 5l, 6l. On the left side 1l, 2l are close to the bottom while 3l,4l are close to the top.

FIG. 13A provide a table for the exemplary write or read of each of the right side memory bits of a cell n,m which is between bit-line n and bit-line n+1, and having a word-line/top gate m. The new added bottom gate is identified in the table as Bottom Gate.

FIG. 13B provide a table for the exemplary write or read of each of the left side memory bits of a cell n,m which is between bit-line n and bit-line n+1, and having a word-line/top gate m. The new bottom gate is identified in the table as Bottom Gate.

FIG. 14A illustrates some exemplary building blocks for the HD-NOR bit-line related peripheral circuits. The bit-line decoder 1406 function is to at least decode an address of k bits to 2^(k) lines of which one is high while all the remainder may be low. The reference signal generator 1408 provides the required voltages needed to operate the read write operations. All the voltages suggested herein are suggested voltages for some conceptual HD-NOR. This level could be adjusted for specific designs based on the choice of materials, process flow, layer thicknesses, and feature sizes. The S/D_n signal generator 1404 may be activated by the signals on lines from the bit line decoder 1406 the n−1 line and the n line. The signal it generates would reflect if it is to generate the S/D_n signal according to the tables provided in at least FIGS. 6, 8, 10, 13A and 13B, or in the S/D_n+1 signal for the case that n−1 line is asserted. The S/D Control 1402 provides instruction to all the 2^(k) S/D signal generators unite (1404) for what operation should be performed and on which bit. The S/D Control 1402 drives a bus carrying these instructing signals which could include write read signals and swap instructions. The output signal S/Dn line would be generated based on these signals and the tables provided in at least FIGS. 6, 8, 10, 13A and 13B.

FIG. 14B illustrates some exemplary building blocks for the HD-NOR top word-lines related peripheral circuits. The Word-Line decoder 1416 function is to at least decode an address of j bits to 2^(j) lines of which one is high while all the rest may be low. The reference signal generator 1418 provides the required voltages needed to operate the read write operations. All the voltages suggested herein are suggested voltages for some conceptual HD-NOR. This level could be adjusted for specific designs based on the choice of materials, process flow, layer thicknesses, and feature sizes. The GLtop, m signal generator 1414 is activated by signals on the m lines from the word-line decoder 1416. The GLtop,m Control 1412 provide instructions to all the 2^(j) the GLtop,m signal generators 1414 for what operation should be performed and on which bit. The GLtop,m Control 1412 drives a bus carrying these instruction signals which could include write read signals and depend of which facet is in now in action: Right signal Top signal Left (R T L) signal and n/n+1 signal (these define which facet and which of the 6 bits on that facet is now in action). The output signal GLtop,m line would be generated based on these signals and the tables provided in FIGS. 6, 8, 10, 13A and 13B.

FIG. 14C illustrates some exemplary building blocks for the HD-NOR side word-lines related peripheral circuits. The Word-Line decoder 1426 function is to decode an address of j bits to 2^(j) lines of which one is high while all the rest may be low. The reference signal generator 1428 provides the required voltages required to operate the read write operations. All the voltages suggested herein are suggested voltages for some conceptual HD-NOR. This level could be adjusted for specific designs based on the choice of materials, process flow, layer thicknesses, and feature sizes. The GLside, m signal generator 1424 may be activated by signals on the lines from the word line decoder 1426 the m−1 line and the m line 1416. Accordingly it will function to generate the right side signals or the left side signals. The GLside,m Control 1422 provides instruction to all the 2j the GLside,m signal generators 1424 for what operation should be performed and on which bit. The GLside,m Control 1412 drives a bus carrying these instructing signals which could include write, read signals and depends of which facet is in now in action: Bottom signal, Middle signal, Top signal (B M T) and n/n+1 signal (these define which facet and which of the 6 bits on that facet is now in action). The output signal GLside,m line would be generated based on these signals and the tables provided in FIGS. 6, 8, 10, 13A and 13B.

The control of the bottom gate is relatively straightforward as it may be shared for all cells and it will be activated according the tables in FIGS. 13A and 13B.

Another known enhancement technique is to control the amount of charge being trapped in a cell to allow coding of more than 1 bit based on the amount of charge. These different enhancement techniques could be combined to achieve even higher number of bits per cell. Current charge trap memories are known to achieve 3 bits per cell. A white paper titled “MirrorBit® Quad Technology: The First 4-bit-per-cell Flash Memory Spansion™ MirrorBit Quad Technology to Expand Flash Memory Innovation for Electronic Devices” was published by Spansion—www.spansion, Doc. 43704A (September 2006), incorporated herein by reference. The paper shows the use of MirrorBit in which every bit site could be programmed to one of 4 levels representing 2 bits, providing in total 4 bits per cell. Adapting such to the HD-NOR could result with a 54 bits per cell non-volatile memory structure. And the structure could be used to have some of the memory used as fast access FB-RAM for which a self-refresh mode could be added. In addition known techniques such as Probabilistic error correction in multi-bit-per-cell flash memory as described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,966,342, incorporated herein by reference, could be integrated for increased robustness of such memory operations.

A known technique to increase performance is to strengthen the bit-lines and the word-lines with upper metal layer strips running in parallel above these lines and periodically being connected to them. This could be important for large blocks of HD-NOR.

The HD-NOR as presented herein utilized SOI substrates. These substrates are more expensive than bulk substrate. The HD-NOR structure could be used as embedded memory for SoC devices. Having the SOI requirement might limit the use of the HD-NOR, as most of the SOC design are using bulk type silicon. One possible technique to overcome this limitation is to use local SOI on bulk. For example the bulk substrate would be processed with epitaxial of SiGe and then epitaxial of silicon on top of the SiGe. The high selectivity of the SiGe layer to etch in respect to silicon could allow later to sacrifice regions of SiGe and to replace them with isolation regions forming local SOI under the HD-NOR structure. Such technique has been detailed in papers by Kyoung Hwan Yeo et al. titled: “A Partially Insulated Field-Effect Transistor (PiFET) as a Candidate for Scaled Transistors” published at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 25, NO. 6, June 2004, and by Chang Woo Oh et al. in paper titled: “A Hybrid Integration of Ultrathin-Body Partially Insulated MOSFETs and a Bulk MOSFET for Better IC Performance: A Multiple-VTH Technology Using Partial SOI Structure” published at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 31, NO. 1, January 2010, the forgoing incorporated herein by reference. An optional stage to perform the step of replacing the sacrificial layer with isolation could be immediately after etching the unused P regions 229 as is illustrated in reference to FIG. 2G herein.

Another of sacrificial layer could be a porous layer formed by an anodizing process followed by an epitaxial step as was developed by Cannon under the ELTRAN process for the purpose of manufacturing SOI wafers. The porous layer could later be replaced or fully oxidized. The anodizing process for porous formation could be made very selectively by proper doping. U.S. Pat. No. 8,470,689, incorporated herein by reference, teaches such use selectivity for forming a multilayer structure. This concept could be adapted to form the back gate and isolation with very good layer control for the formation of an 18 bits HD-NOR structure.

Another alternative is first to deep implant to form the N type back gate, than light implant the top layer to form minimal N type but high enough to protect it from the anodizing process. Then open holes in the designated locations for cell isolation etch—within regions 229 as is illustrated in reference to FIG. 2G. Then anodize the wafer forming the porous sacrifice layer for the future bottom gate and reducing the need for an epitaxial step. The channel area would later be doped to make them P type.

FIG. 15 illustrates an exemplary architecture of a HD-NOR array. It could be a standalone device structure or embedded within a larger SoC. It illustrates a modular memory structure of 64 memory blocks 1501, 1502 with the peripheral circuits built-in a corresponding modular structure with 8 top units Pt_i to control the word-lines and additional 8 bottom units Pb_i to control the word-lines, and 8 left side units Pl_i to control the bit-lines and 8 right side units Pr_i to control the bit-lines.

These could be used to drive the control lines from both sides to improve performance and reduce variability.

In addition it could be used as redundancy so single control unit failure could be recovered.

This architecture could also support additional modes of operation.

The structure could be designed to allow independent access to 8 blocks provided none of them share the Peripherals circuits.

The structure could be designed to support synchronized access to up to 8 units sharing the same row or sharing the same column reducing access power and still provide multiple bits.

The structure could be designed to support on chip transfer from the non volatile portion to the high speed FB-RAM portion or the other way. Such transfer could be done in parallel to or from 8 blocks reducing time and power for such transfer. Such capabilities could allow high speed access with low power operating mode. So data is transferred to the FB-DRAM designated block for fast access but could stored back into the NOR NV section for sleep or power down.

The corners Clt, Crt, Clb, Crb could be used for device top level control for these operating modes, to generate the special voltage source required for read and write, and for interface to external devices.

The HD-NOR was previously presented herein on an SOI wafer/substrate. Alternatively it could be constructed on bulk borrowing the isolation concept used in modern FinFET technology. In such bulk implementation it would be challenging to form the bottom gate resulting with the 10 bit per cell option. The optional use mode of Floating Body DRAM would also be more challenging to achieve. Yet by adding under the cell isolation a two state memory of the type developed by Zeno Semiconductor, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 9,030,872, incorporated herein by reference, could be implemented.

Another alternative is to build special SOI-like wafers to support a full 6 bits in the bottom facet. Such special M-SOI wafer could then be used to build the HD-NOR on top and aligned to the backside word lines.

FIG. 16A illustrates a standard SOI substrate, which may include substrate 1600, BOX 1610 and silicon 1620. FIG. 16B illustrates the formation of an HD-NOR structure 1630 in silicon 1620.

FIG. 16C illustrates structure of a very thin or ultra thin buried oxide SOI substrate, such as is used for FD-SOI which may include substrate 1601, thinBOX 1611 and silicon 1621. FIG. 16D illustrates the structure after doping a designated back gate 1640 and activating it, utilizing, for example, ion implantation and RTP annealing. FIG. 16E illustrates the structure after forming the HD-NOR structure 1650 and contact 1660 to the back gate 1640.

FIG. 16F illustrates structure of bulk substrate 1602. FIG. 16G illustrates the formation of back-gate grid 1642 which would also be the back word-lines. The gate material could be chosen from a range of options such as polysilicon, N type silicon, metals such as tungsten which would withstand high process temperature processing of the following processing. The grid of back-gates could be isolated by oxide or other isolation materials. FIG. 16H illustrates the addition of the O/N/O layers 1662 for the back gate grid 1642. FIG. 16I illustrates the structure after bonding a transferred mono-crystalline silicon layer 1672. The transfer could utilize ion-cut or ELTRAN or any other layer transfer technique. The O/N/O layers 1662 could be split between the base structure of FIG. 16H and the transferred layer to facilitate the bonding. FIG. 16J illustrates forming the HD-NOR 1652, which may include the 24 bit per cell option. The connection to the back word-lines (back gate grid 1642) may be done at the line out edges.

Another alternative is to provide an HD-NOR structure. For example, as illustrated in FIG. 2J previously herein, as a ‘Memory Substrate’. Thus a vendor can fabricate the Memory Substrate, cover with isolation and then transfer on top of a bare wafer using ion-cut, ELTRAN or other layer transfer technique. Such ‘Memory Substrate’ could be a useful fabric for SOC applications. Designers could customize the underlying memory fabric by etching through to break it into memory blocks per their need. The memory peripherals could be fabricated on the upper layer and then using through layer via connects to the bit-lines and word-lines. An EDA tool with HD-NOR peripherals library and memory compiler could be tied together to support a designer in integration for an SoC product. FIG. 17A illustrates a reference SOI wafer which may include substrate 1700, BOX 1710 and silicon 1720. FIG. 17B illustrates it after forming multi-core circuits 1790 on it, for example, of processor blocks—CPU and memory blocks—MEM.

FIG. 17C illustrates a Memory SOI substrate with generic HD-NOR fabric 1702 built inside, and may include an isolation oxide layer 1740 on top of the HD-NOR fabric 1702 and a monocrystalline silicon layer 1750 on top. These may be formed by layer transfer. The structure may be similar to those presented in FIGS. 16E and 16I. FIG. 17D illustrates adding the multi-cores but just of processor block—CPU and etching trenches 1704 to customize the generic memory terrain and to open access into it. FIG. 17E illustrates adding the peripheral circuits for controlling the generic underlying memory block and the connections 1706 to the processors.

An alternative system approach could be to use the custom logic as the base and to bond the NOR fabric 1702 on top of the logic circuit and etch holes in the NOR fabric for the adding of connections to the circuits underneath. In such alternative, the NOR fabric alignment precision would be based on the wafer bonder precision, which is far less precise than lithographic alignment (˜200 nm vs. 2 nm). Yet, the NOR fabric is a repeating fabric and techniques described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,405,420, incorporated herein by reference, could be used to allow accommodation of the bonder misalignment and still form an effective 3D system integration.

In another alternative instead of the base wafer being an SOI wafer as is illustrated in FIGS. 16A-16B, a donor wafer such as illustrated in FIG. 18A could be used. The wafer could include a porous structure 1812/1814 and a mono-crystallized layer 1820 on top of it. Such donor wafer fabrication could use a modified flow of the one developed by Cannon, named ELTRAN, as detailed in a paper by T. Yonehara, entitled “ELTRAN® (SOI-Epi Wafer™) Technology”, published in Chapter 4, pp. 53, Silicon Wafer Bonding Technology for VLSI and MEMES applications, INSPEC, IEE, 2002, incorporated herein by reference. The general top-level flow of the ELTRAN process for the fabrication of SOI wafer is illustrated in prior-art FIG. 19.

As illustrated in FIG. 18A, a donor wafer 1810 may be constructed. Lower porous layer 1812 and upper porous layer 1814 may be formed by means of anodization on a substrate 1800 such as, for example, a mono-crystalline silicon wafer. The anodization process may involve passing a current through a solution of HF and ethanol with the single-crystal silicon wafer as the anode in order to form microscopic pores of diameters of a few nm on the surface of the wafer at a density of about 10¹¹/cm². The reaction occurs at the far end of the pores, meaning that the pores progressively elongate into the inside of the wafer. The structure of the porous silicon can be controlled by the concentration of the solution, the current density and the resistivity of the silicon. Moreover, the thickness of the porous silicon layer can be controlled by the length of time for which the anodization is carried out. The easiest way of controlling the porous structure is to vary the current density. By doing this a porous layer that has a multi-layered structure, for example, lower porous layer 1812 and upper porous layer 1814, may be formed. In this example, the layer of porous silicon closest to the top surface, upper porous layer 1814, was formed in the base silicon wafer using a low current density, and then after this the current density was raised and a second layer of different/higher porosity was formed (lower porous layer 1812). The upper layer of porous silicon upper porous layer 1814 contains microscopic pores of diameter a few nm, and below this is formed lower porous layer 1812 for which the pore diameter is a few times greater than the upper porous layer 1814.

Dry oxidation of the porous silicon may be carried out at a low temperature of about 400° C. This results in oxidization of about 1˜3 nm of the inner walls of the pores, thus preventing the structure of the porous silicon from changing, such as bending or relaxing for example, under a subsequent high-temperature treatment.

Baking may be carried out at about 1000˜1100° C. in a hydrogen atmosphere in a CVD epitaxial reactor. Hydrogen pre-baking causes the pores in the porous silicon surface to close up to the extent that the density of these pores goes down from about 10¹¹/cm² before to less than 10⁴/cm², and hence the surface is smoothed. To reduce defects, a pre-injection method could be used whereby a small additional amount of silicon is provided from the gas phase (for example as silane) during the hydrogen pre-baking and surface diffusion is made to occur so that the remaining pores in the surface of the porous silicon close-up.

After the pre-injection, epitaxial growth may be carried out at temperatures of about 900˜1000° C. The epitaxial layer illustrated as epi layer 1820 in FIG. 18B could be grown to a few nm thick layer, for example, such as about 5 nm or about 10 nm; or to a moderately thick layer, such as, for example, about 100 nm or about 200 nm; or to a relatively thick layer, such as, for example, about 1 micron, or about 3 microns thick. The donor wafer 1810 would then have a silicon layer, epi layer 1820, on top of a cut structure 1832. Cut structure 1832 may include the porous layers, such as lower porous layer 1812 and upper porous layer 1814. Epi layer 1820 may be monocrystalline silicon. Cut structure 1832 may include more than 2 layers (for example three differing pore densities) or may be accomplished by a single layer of changing characteristics, for example, a linearly (or non-linear) changing porosity, or a combination of both. Donor wafer 1810 may include substrate 1800, epi layer 1820 and cut structure 1832, which may include lower porous layer 1812 and upper porous layer 1814. The process may also be modified to leave an edge pore exclusion zone (not shown) including and back from the wafer edge that would not receive the anodization and thereby result in no pores being formed. This could be useful for at least mechanical strength, sealing, selectivity objectives. The edge pore exclusion zone may include widths of 1 um to 5 mm and may include/cover the wafer edge, or be pulled back from the edge. The edge pore exclusion zone may also be designed to not be a continuous ring around the wafer's edge, but rather include breaks/regions in the pore exclusion zone ring of porous silicon to improve the future cleaving process, giving direct or near-direct pore access from the wafer edge at select points/regions/cross-sections, which may result in fewer defects.

A key advantage of the porous base layer transfer technology is the ability of acquiring a base wafer with ‘cut’ porous structure built-in, run a conventional process including high temperature steps such as doping activation and then later bonds it to a target wafer and then cut.

FIG. 20A illustrates a donor wafer with silicon base substrate 2000, porous double layer cut structure 2032 and top silicon 2020. FIG. 20B illustrate the structure after forming the NOR structure on the top silicon 2020. Resulting with base substrate 2000, cut structure 2032, and top NOR structure 2030 with 3 active facets per cell, which is similar to 1150 or the structure illustrated in FIG. 2I herein.

FIGS. 20C and 20D illustrate the structure after flipping it and bonding it on top of a wafer with a top oxide layer, and then cutting the porous cut structure 2032, lifting off the base substrate 2000 which could be sent to recycle and reuse.

FIG. 20E illustrates the structure after cleaning off the porous residues.

FIG. 20F illustrates then adding O/N/O layers on the now exposed ‘back-side’.

FIG. 20G illustrates then forming gates for the fourth channel facet resulting in four facets each with control gate (C-Gate), right gates (R-Gates) and left gates (L-gates). Thus, channels 2050 are surrounded with gates 2052, 2054, 2056, 2058 to all four facets that are not connected to the S/D lines.

An alternative fabrication technique is to not use porous base donor wafer but rather use a bulk wafer and form the porous cut layer as part of forming the 2D NOR structure. Specifically, following the step of etching the P regions for channel isolation as illustrated in FIG. 2F and FIG. 2G herein, place the entire structure into an anodizing process forming the porous cut structure underneath through the openings 229. To avoid anodizing the active channel due to the isotropic nature of the anodizing etch process, the O/N/O layers 224, or part of it, could be first deposited then a short RIE etch could be used to reopen the bottom of 229 and than an anodizing step could be used to form the porous structure underneath saving the need for epitaxy of layer 2020. In such an alternative then after flipping, bonding, and cut the now exposed back side needs to be planarized, using, for example CMP or H₂ annealing. After which O/N/O and fourth gate could be formed.

Additional alternative is to increase the number of bits per facet by utilizing techniques such as non-uniform channel as presented in a paper by Gu Haiming et al titled “Novel multi-bit non-uniform channel charge trapping memory device with virtual-source NAND flash array” published in Vol. 31, No. 10 Journal of Semiconductors October 2010, incorporated herein by reference.

Additional alternative is to increase the number of bits per facet by utilizing techniques such as advanced charge trap layer such as one utilizing ambipolar polymer as presented in a paper by Ye Zhou et al titled “Nonvolatile multilevel data storage memory device from controlled ambipolar charge trapping mechanism” published in SCIENTIFIC REPORTS|3: 2319|DOI: 10.1038/srep02319, incorporated herein by reference.

Additional alternative is to increase the number of bits per facet by utilizing techniques such as advanced charge trap layer such as one utilizing multilayer silicon nanocrystal as presented by T. Z. Lu et al in a paper titled “Multilevel Charge Storage in Silicon nanocrystal Multilayers” published in Appl. Phys. Lett. 87, 202110 (2005), incorporated herein by reference.

Additional alternative is to increase the number of bits per facet by utilizing techniques such as advanced charge trap layer such as one utilizing multi-layered Ge/Si nanocrystals as presented by Guangli WANG et al in a paper titled “Charge trapping memory devices employing multi-layered Ge/Si nanocrystals for storage fabricated with ALD and PLD methods” published in Front. Optoelectron. China 2011, 4(2): 146-149, incorporated herein by reference.

For one skilled in the art, other variations or alternatives known for charge trap memory with the required corresponding enhancements to the channel or to the charge trap—O/N/O layers may be employed.

FIG. 21 illustrates 8 bit naming and location on a facet. Each of the four facets have a primary gate line 2110 which we can call C-Gate, a supporting gate line right 2120 which we call R-Gate, and supporting gate line left 2130 which we can call L-Gate. Reference to FIG. 20F, it could be:

-   -   C-Gate 2052 with R-Gate 2058 and L-Gate 2054 or alternatively,     -   C-Gate 2054 with R-Gate 2052 and L-Gate 2056 or alternatively,     -   C-Gate 2056 with R-Gate 2054 and L-Gate 2058 or alternatively,     -   C-Gate 2058 with R-Gate 2056 and L-Gate 2052 FIG. 22 illustrates         the operating condition for that storage facet. The read is by         measuring the current (Vth) between the S/Dn 2062 to S/Dn+1 2064         shown in FIG. 20F.

Engineering the memory peripheral circuits for the memory matrix including the circuits to generate the required signals for the memory control lines and the sense circuits to sense the memory content is a well practiced memory engineering task. The memory structure presented herein adds some less common variations as a word-line controlling a gate may be function as a R-Gate or as C-Gate or as L-Gate depend on the specific channel presently in action. In the following we review the high level architecture for such a memory control circuit.

The following discussion would be for a specific one of the many alternative architecture options—of an 8 bit per facet as illustrated in FIG. 20F and FIG. 21. However, this methodology may be applied to a variety of architecture options.

As an alternative the gate control lines of the cells adjacent to a channel which is being written to or read from could be biased to a negative voltage such as −4 v to disable these adjacent channels. For example, if in reference to FIG. 3 a GLtop,m is active as being the control gate (C-Gate) for the channel underneath it and GLleft,m is acting as L-Gate, then GLtop,m+1 and not shown GLbottom,m+1 are both being set to −4 v negative (which still do not erase), and also GLleft,m+1 could be set to −4 v negative, so the channel underneath GLtop,m+1 is deactivate to avoid disturb.

FIG. 22 illustrates the table of write read conditions to form 8 independent memory locations per facet resulting with 32 memory locations per channel.

FIG. 23 illustrate a memory addressing format 2300 which could include 0-2 bits to select the specific facet (F₀₋₁), a few bits to select the specific Channel (CH₀₋₁), a few bits to select the specific Row (R_(0-k)), a few bits to select the specific Column (C_(0-j)) and a few bits to select the specific memory Block (B_(0-i)). The decoding function of the Block is straightforward.

FIG. 24A illustrates block diagram of the circuit controlling each of the bit-lines—S/D line 1 in which 1 denotes the active channel column. The decoder 2406 will assert one line of the 1 lines for each column. The signal generator 2408 will provide the required signals that could be applied to the S/D line. The signal generator 2404 will activate signals only to the S/D line 1′ for ‘left’—S/Dn function activated by 1′ or ‘right’—S/Dn+1 function activated by 1′+1 to provide the proper signal to the selected channel according to the table of FIG. 22 and the operation control as signaled by the S/D control 2402 to activate write read or erase.

FIG. 24B illustrates a general block diagram of the circuits to control the gate-lines. Each gate-line could function as R-Gate, C-Gate or L-Gate according to the Chanel decoding and the Facet decoding. The Side-Gate-Lines could affect two adjacent channels so the Top/Bottom Gates could help select the active channel and disable the adjacent non-selected non-active channel, as activated by the channel decoder 2414. The gate line generator 2400 could generate GLside,m and GLtop/bottom, m signals. Each of these Gate Lines could function as R-Gate, C-Gate or L-Gate according to the selection of Facet as decoded by the Facet decoder 2416 and the activated channel line. For each Gate line the signal generator 2400 could include three generators: one for the R-Gate function 2417, one for the C-Gate function 2418, and one for the L-Gate function 2419. These generators would generate the right proper signal according to the selected function which could be signaled by the write/read control 2412 and using reference signals provided by the reference signal generator 2418.

The reference signal generator 2418 provides the required signals to operate the read write operations. All the voltages suggested herein are suggested voltages for some conceptual NOR. These signal levels could be adjusted for specific designs based on the choice of materials, process flow, layer thicknesses, and feature sizes.

Another known enhancement technique is to control the amount of charge being trapped in a cell to allow coding of more than 1 bit base on the amount of charge. These different enhancement techniques could be combined to achieve a higher number of bits per cell. Current charge trap memories are known to achieve 3 bits or 8 levels per cell. A white paper titled “MirrorBit® Quad Technology: The First 4-bit-per-cell Flash Memory Spansion™ MirrorBit Quad Technology to Expand Flash Memory Innovation for Electronic Devices” was published by Spansion—www.spansion, Doc. 43704A (September 2006), incorporated herein by reference. The paper shows the use of MirrorBit in which every bit site could be program to one of 4 levels representing 2 bits, providing in total 4 bits per cell. Adapting such to the HD-NOR could result, if we use 4 levels per location, with 2×32=64 bits per cell, and with 8 levels per location, with 3×32=96 bits per cell of non volatile memory structure. And the same structure could be used to have some of the memory used as fast access FB-RAM for which a self-refresh mode could be added. In addition known techniques such as Probabilistic error correction in multi-bit-per-cell flash memory as described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,966,342, incorporated herein by reference, could be integrated for increased robustness of such memory operations.

In general memory design it is common to use partitioning which utilizes powers of 2, such as: 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, . . . . Such work well with decoding and addressing. Yet, FIG. 9 illustrates a structure for which the number of bits sited within a facet is 6, which may be challenging for the decoding function. An optimal solution is to find a memory allocation which would be close enough to bridge over this challenge with minimal cost. For example, a facet of 6 sites might allow each site to have 3 levels representing a total memory space of 18 bits per facet. This could be mapped to an address space of 4 bits which would need 16 memory storage option out of the potential 18. A simple look up table could be used for the circuit to support such memory allocation allowing for 2 bits of the 18 to be left unused or for redundancy/check&parity bit use.

The three gate control of the charge trap layers of 3D-NOR as illustrated in FIG. 21 could be used for distributed bits allocation rather than programming/erasing distinct sites, as illustrated in FIG. 25.

FIG. 25 illustrates the concept of utilizing the right 2511 and left gates 2513 to focus the trapping region to a zone of trapping region 2502 driven by the control gate 2501 high ‘programming’ voltage. The R-Gate voltage and the L-Gate voltage need to be below the voltage which forces charges into the charge trap layer (write) or loose the charges from the the charge trap layer (erase). The negative voltage of the right gate depletes the channel region under its control 2512 while the negative voltage of the left gate depletes the channel region under its control 2514 to focus the region of charge trapping. Controlling the process could allow a scanning of the region within the channel for which charge could be available and accordingly allow forming a distribution of charges trapped at the trapping layer. This could be done by controlling the voltage of the side gates to form a scanning distribution of charges within the channel while control of the control gate 2501 programming voltage and the S/D charges forming current could control the amount of charges being trapped at the ‘focus’ zone 2502.

FIG. 26 illustrates the use of positive voltage to form trapping ‘focus.’ Adding positive voltage to the R-Gate and L-Gate could be used to extend the width of the controlled regions within the channel.

FIG. 27 illustrates the concept of using the scanning concept for reading. For reading, the R-Gate and the L-Gate could be controlled to form scanning similar to writing but the C-Gate voltage is kept below the voltage that drive charges in or out of the charge trap layer, and by monitoring the current through the channel by sensing the selected S/D lines and monitoring their current.

FIG. 28 illustrates a block erase operation in which all the charges are being forced out from the respective trap zones.

This distributed form of storage could help reduce the sensitivity to local defect and increase the overall memory capacity.

For this distributed memory storage technique the Orthonormal basis signal processing techniques of linear algebra could be deployed. Quoting: Orthonormal Basis: A subset {v₁, . . . , v_(k)} of a vector space V, with the inner product

,

, is called orthonormal if

v_(i), v_(j)

=0 when i≠j. That is, the vectors are mutually perpendicular. Moreover, they are all required to have length one:

v_(i), v_(j)

1.

There many such basis and in signal processing it has been extensively studied in the art. A subset of these are called wavelets has been described in an article by G. BEYLKIN titled: “ON THE REPRESENTATION OF OPERATORS IN BASES OF COMPACTLY SUPPORTED WAVELETS” published SIAM J. NUMER. ANAL. c 1992 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics Vol. 6, No. 6, pp. 1716-1740, December 1992 011, incorporated herein by reference.

With Orthonormal set of vectors every ‘bit site’ could be represented by one of these vectors. So for n bits we would have n vectors. Writing a bit would be like adding a vector to the charge trap surface by scanning along the channel and modulating the amount stored according to the vector. Reading would be the inverse which could be the effect of multiplying the stored values by the reading vector. Accordingly if the vector was stored the value of the reading would be ‘1’ and if it was not than it would be ‘0’. The vector itself could be multiply by a scalar which would represent a multilevel per vector.

Additional information on wavelets and related decomposition and reconstruction algorithms may be found in “Fundamentals of Wavelets Theory, Algorithms, and Applications,” Goswami, J., C., et al., 2^(nd) Ed., J Wiley & Sons, 2010, especially chapters 6 and 7, the entire book is incorporated herein by reference. Orthonormal wavelets such as, for example, of Shannon (sine radians sampling), Meyer (smoothing of Shannon), Battle-Lemarié, and Daubechies may be utilized depending on engineering choices and optimizations. Biorthogonal wavelets, for example, of Cohen, Daubechies, and Feaveau, may be useful depending on engineering choices and optimizations. Moreover, additional information on wavlets may be found in B. Vidakovic, et al., “Wavelets for Kids, A Tutorial Introduction,” 1994 Duke University, incorporated herein by reference.

FIG. 29A illustrates block diagram of optional circuits to generate the signal for such storage approach. A counter 2902 will start counting per each write pulse or read pulse. The counting bits would be inputted into a look-up-table (LUT) 2904 along with additional vector selection bits—V bits from the charge address 2900. The look-up-table 2904 would carry the full set of vectors of which would be selected by the inputted V bits. The counter would facilitate the scanning process by going along the vector address Similar circuits could be used for the generator of each of the control signals for the R-Gate and L-Gate. The output of the LUT 2904 could be inputted to a digital to analog converter 2906. This circuit could be used for the read scanning signal generator and the write scanning signal generators. The signals 2908 for the R-Gate and L-Gate could be the same for read or write. Scalar multiplication could be achieved by the C-Gate and S/D signal, yet it could be alternatively achieved by controlling the scan time so by doubling the time about double the amount of charge could be trapped. Time control is less common as it impacts the memory access time.

FIG. 29B illustrates block diagram of optional circuits to generate the signal for such storage approach. A counter 2912 will start counting per each write pulse or read pulse. The counting bits would be inputted into a look-up-table (LUT) 2914 along with additional vector selection bits—V bits from the charge address 2910. The look-up-table 2914 would carry the full set of vectors which would be selected by the inputted V bits. This is optional as the vector could be defined by the scanning process related to FIG. 29A, and accordingly the Vector LUT 2914 would become a fixed voltage or could incorporate the scalar multiplication currently illustrated by the reference voltage generator 2917. The counter 2912 would control the write and read operation during the scanning process Similar circuits could be used for the generator of each of the control signal for the C-Gate and S/D lines. The output of the LUT 2914 could be inputted to a multiplying digital to analog converter 2916. The scalar could be represented by the level from the Reference voltage generator 2917 according to the S bits from the charge address 2910 could be provided to the D to A 2916. This circuit could be used for the read signal generator and the write signal generators. The signals 2918 would support the write operation with high positive voltage, the read operation with mid-level positive voltage and erase operation with a high negative voltage.

For the read additional circuits could be added for the S/D line with integrating analog to digital converter. Such structures could support multiple signal processing techniques to allow flexibility between storage density, access speed and device yield.

The memory HD-NOR memory fabric could be used to empower SoC products by providing high density NV memory and high speed DRAM memory fabric underneath the logic SoC circuits as presented in respect to FIG. 17A to FIG. 17E herein. Additional alternative is to use this fabric architecture for programmable logic and general logic. Such could be done by allocating some blocks for memory and others for logic, alternatively two structures could be used such as a first memory terrain don top of its logic terrain and finally user logic. This is leveraging the HD-NOR fabric for many uses.

The O/N/O stacks within the HD-NOR fabric could be designed independently; for example, the facet(s) related to the top gates and the facet(s) related to the side gates could be different in many ways. An ONO stack could include the same materials with different thicknesses or different materials. Some of such alternative O/N/O stack materials have been presented in a paper by Chun Zhao titled “Review on Non-Volatile Memory with High-k Dielectrics Flash for Generation Beyond 32 nm” published at Materials 2014, 7, 5117-5145; doi:10.3390/ma7075117, incorporated herein by reference. An O/N/O stack could include band gap engineering for better performance. Such band gap engineering has been described in papers such as by Dong Hua. Li et al titled “Effects of Equivalent Oxide Thickness on Bandgap-Engineered SONOS Flash Memory” published at 2009 IEEE Nanotechnology Materials and Devices Conference Jun. 2-5, 2009, and by Hang-Ting Lue et al titled “BE-SONOS: A Bandgap Engineered SONOS with Excellent Performance and Reliability” published at IEDM 2005. And in patents such as U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,414,889, 7,512,016 and 7,839,696, all the forgoing references are incorporated herein by reference.

In the NOR architectures such as illustrated in FIG. 2A to FIG. 3D herein, the active O/N/O stack for the side gate is formed in-between the S/D lines. The flow as described will likely deposit the O/N/O material on substantially all exposed surfaces and not just on the desired facet and accordingly reducing the area for the side gates by two times the O/N/O thickness in each direction. In some applications it could be advantageous to form the side O/N/O stack extra thin. Such could result in shorter retention times but also with a shorter write and erase time. Such ultra-thin O/N/O is some times considered a DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory) alternative. Accordingly such HD-NOR memory could integrate multiple memory types in one device, for example, such as conventional NV (Non-Volatile) memory in the facets controlled by the top and bottom gates and faster memories with a shorter retention time in the facets controlled by the side gates. Such memories are presented in papers such as by H. Clement Wann and Chenming Hu titled “High-Endurance Ultra-Thin Tunnel Oxide in MONOS Device Structure for Dynamic Memory Application” published at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETERS, VOL. 16, NO. 11, November 1995, by Dong-Il Moon et al titled “A Novel FinFET with High-Speed and Prolonged Retention for Dynamic Memory” published at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 35, No. 12, December 2014, and in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,608,250, 8,329,535 and 9,025,386. Additional optional enhancement is to combine two level of memory forming structure in the gate stack such as presented by Daniel Schinke et al titled “Computing with Novel Floating-Gate Devices” published at IEEE Computer magazine February 2011, and also described by Daniel Johannes Schinke in ‘A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty of North Carolina State University’ 2011, titled “Computing with Novel Floating Gate Devices”; and by Biplab Sarkar titled “Dual Floating Gate Unified Memory MOSFET With Simultaneous Dynamic and Non-Volatile Operation” published at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 35, NO. 1, January 2014, and by Yu-Chien Chiu, titled “Low Power 1T DRAM/NVM Versatile Memory Featuring Steep Sub-60-mV/decade Operation, Fast 20-ns Speed, and Robust 85° C.-Extrapolated 1016 Endurance” published at IEEE 2015 Symposium on VLSI Technology, all of the forgoing are incorporated herein by reference.

For a logic fabric the structures illustrated in FIG. 20D could be used. FIG. 30A illustrates such a fabric with control lines to control the S/D lines and the Gate lines. The Gate lines could be grouped to the Side lines which are affecting channels right to them and left to them and bottom lines that each is controlling an individual channel. Using the S/D lines 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, . . . and the Bottom Gate lines 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, . . . and Side Gate lines 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024 . . . every channel could be programmed to one of three states:

Active transistor—no charge in charge trap.

Always On transistor—connected link: Charge trap is substantially fully programmed with positive charge.

Always Off transistor—Disconnected link: Charge trap is fully programmed with negative charge.

Using these control lines the fabric could be programmed for future logic use.

FIG. 30B illustrates a small matrix of such a programmable fabric terrain with 4×4 of programmable channels 3010. FIG. 30C illustrates such a channel programmed as an active transistor. FIG. 30D illustrates such a channel programmed as a conductive link. And FIG. 30E illustrates such a channel programmed as a disconnected link.

Additional elements which could be deployed for the logic use of the HD-NOR fabric is customizing the terrain for such logic use by etching the S/D at selected locations and connecting the edges of the disconnected S/D line to an active transistor on the custom logic terrain on top for allowing the control of programming as illustrated in FIG. 31A-FIG. 31E.

The ‘bubble 3112 illustrates the detailed of formation of disconnect in the S/D_3 and forming a bypass transistor 3102 at the upper custom logic layer to support full array programming. FIG. 31B illustrates the structure of S/D line over oxide covered with oxide and covered with silicon for the custom logic. FIG. 31C illustrates etching the S/D through the multilayer structure, thus disconnecting the S/D line. FIG. 31D illustrates forming a connection to the disconnect edge and FIG. 31E illustrates the bypass transistor 3102 which could allow the full array programming. At programming time the bypass transistors could be activated to an on-state allowing the S/D line to function as if it was not cut.

This form of customizing the HD-NOR fabric could allow support for programmable logic as presented in the following.

FIG. 32A is an illustration of a single cell of such memory substrate with S/D lines of N+ type silicon 3104, 3106 and P− type silicon 3102 in between. The charge trap regions and the gates are not shown as they are underneath or on the sides of P− type silicon 3102. FIG. 32B illustrates 4 such cells arranged as a 2×2 array and FIG. 32C illustrates a larger array of 5×16 cells.

FIG. 33A illustrates an indication of forming a cut in the S/D line 3302 as presented in respect to FIG. 31A.

FIG. 33B illustrates connecting the S/D line to a ground 3304. This could be a programmable ground which would be activated at normal operation and deactivated at programming time.

FIG. 33C illustrates a channel being programmed to either an always on “0” or to an always off “1”. This could replace the SRAM cell in a Look-Up-Table.

FIG. 33D illustrates programming the channel to always on 3308.

FIG. 33E illustrates programming the channel to always off 3310.

FIG. 33F illustrates the channel functioning as an active transistor with conductor 3314 going across it connected to the transistor gate as indicted by 3312.

FIG. 34A is from one of Xilinx early patents U.S. Pat. No. 4,706,216 incorporated herein by reference. FIG. 34A illustrates the classic 4 bit Look-Up-Table (LUT4) which uses 16 SRAM bit-cells and a decoder constructed by N type transistors. FIG. 34B illustrates such a LUT4 with the additional input drivers to buffer the 4 inputs and for their inversion for controlling the decoder, and the output signal reconstruction circuits to reconstruct the decoder output to a full “0”/‘1” signal. Some of the extra circuits would be constructed on the upper custom silicon layer while the main LUT4 of FIG. 34A could be implemented in the NOR substrate as is illustrated in FIG. 35 with symbol map on its right.

Use of the NOR structure as illustrated in FIG. 35 could be designed in a way in which the LUT4 decoders of multiple LUT4s are aligned to share the same S/D lines. In the decoder part of the LUT4 the transistors may be left un-programmed, and accordingly the S/D lines continuation technique described in FIG. 31B-31F could be skipped, as its function is to restore the ability to program transistors for which their S/D line was disconnected (cut in the S/D line 3302).

The substrate of N channel transistors tightly packed in a 2D array in which every transistor could be configured as an active transistor or a connected path or a disconnected path provides a useful configurable terrain which could be used to form high density NV memory, high speed DRAM and or highly configurable logic terrain. Such a substrate overlaid by custom fabric could be used to form many attractive systems. For example, a NOR substrate of N channel transistors could be configured as domino logic that is known to be a very high speed design technique utilizing primarily N channel transistors. Such as in a paper by Allam, M. W et al titled “High-speed dynamic logic styles for scaled-down CMOS and MTCMOS technologies” publish at Low Power Electronics and Design, 2000. ISLPED '00, incorporated herein by reference. An improvement is presented allowing higher speed and lower power domino logic. FIG. 36 is a copy of FIG. 3 there illustrating the “Domino part” 3600 which is build by just N channel transistors and the signal reconstruction portion 3602 which include clock circuits CLK a pre-charge circuits Q1 and keeper circuits Q2, I1, I2, I3, N1, P1, which could be build on the overlaying custom fabric 1790. Another alternative was presented in a recent paper by Tonmoy Roy et al, titled “Novel FinFET Domino Logic Circuit Using Dual Keepers” published at: ICEEICT, 2014, incorporated herein by reference. Many other variations are known in the art with various specific names which we could refer to them all as domino logic.

Specific types of configurable logic could be formed in such NOR substrates. Within the field of programmable logic the most used fabric for which there is a wide range of design tools are the LUT based fabrics used for the most advanced FPGA and the PLA/PLD based fabrics used for some lower complexity lower devices.

FIG. 37A illustrates a simple prior art Programmable logic array PLA structure. These approaches were further developed with industry naming them Programmable array logic PAL, PLD and Complex programmable logic device CPLD.

FIG. 37B illustrates the first step of utilizing NOR substrate to implement such a PLA. The left side 3712 illustrates the multiple NAND gates implementation. Each channel could be programmed to either left as active transistor or programmed to always on marked by 3702 symbol. The left side 3712 illustrates 9 horizontal strings of NAND gate 3722 each with 6 inputs. Channel programmed isolation 3720 is isolating the NAND portion from the wired-or portion 3714. In these drawing the symbols defined herein before in FIG. 33A-F and FIG. 35 are used whenever possible.

In the wired-or portion 3714 there are isolated central bars 3742 for which there are programmable connections 3724 to each side to the wired-or bar. The two groups are isolated with isolations 3721.

FIG. 37C is illustrating adding the top connection over the structure of FIG. 37B. The vertical connection bars 3732 are the input signals A, AN, B, BN, C, CN connected to all Programmable NAND strings. Then horizontal wires 3736 illustrated by symbol 3704 with connection to down 3706. The horizontal connections 3736 are connecting the ‘NAND” outputs to the two bar 3742. The outputs of the programmable wired-or are Q1, Q2, Q3 and Q4.X

Another alternative is to use the HD-NOR substrate for some of the required memory peripherals circuits. The left side 3712 of 37B illustrates construction of a wide AND circuit that is common for select lines decoder. The AND of FIG. 37B and FIG. C is oriented for the Gate-Lines/Word-Lines.

FIG. 37D illustrates forming a high fan in AND oriented for the S/D lines—Bit-Lines. FIG. 37D use symbols used before herein. All of the non-marked channels could be programmed to either ‘left as active transistor’ or made to be ‘always on’ and accordingly form the proper address decoding function. The output of the AND circuits are marked as BL1 to BLS. FIG. 37E illustrates the overlay of the horizontal connection lines bringing in the addresses marked as Address 0—A0 and its inverted signal A0N to address 8—A8 and its inverted signal A8N.

The points that the S/D line is cut is illustrated by an ‘X’. At any of these points a proper circuit needs to be formed on-top to support the programming mode. Transistors as was presented in respect to FIG. 31A are an option. Alternatively diodes could also be used with a potential limitation on the number of bits programmed into the affected facets. For a diode it might be preferred to use one diode orientation to odd S/D lines and the other orientation for even S/D lines.

In another alternative additional poly-silicon NAND type could be added to the HD-NOR structure. The starting point could be the structure as illustrated in FIG. 2J before. In such case the terrain of horizontal going gates could be used leveraging the other side of the gates for additional memory capacity.

FIG. 38A illustrates the structure of FIG. 2J after adding a charge trap layer, for example, O/N/O layer, on top of the horizontal gates.

FIG. 38B illustrates the structure after adding on-top channel material, for example, such as depositing P type poly silicon or layer transferring a P type single crystal silicon layer, and then patterning/etching the on-top channel material, thus forming vertical to the gate NAND strings 3802.

FIG. 38C illustrates the structure after adding Source and Drain 3804 N type to the NAND strings.

FIG. 38D illustrates the structure from the view point of vertical cut along gate NAND strings 3802.

Another alternative is to add-on additional polysilicon NOR structures leveraging the base HD-NOR flow to add additional layers of memory.

It starts by modifying the structure of FIG. 2E by forming the hard mask of 215 much taller as is illustrated in FIG. 39A. The following steps as are illustrated in FIG. 39B and FIG. 39C are following the steps in a similar flow as was presented before up to FIG. 2H.

Additional steps are taking place to form the structure of FIG. 39C which include CMP and etch back the gate structure to form groves 3900.

FIG. 39D illustrates the structure after filling these groves with second hard mask 3910.

FIG. 39E illustrates the structure after removing the first hard mask.

FIG. 39F illustrates the structure after adding O/N/O and gate material instead of the removed first hard mask, and then CMP and etchback leveraging the second hard mask.

FIG. 39G illustrates the structure after filling in a third hard-mask. And then a planarization such as CMP.

FIG. 39H illustrates the structure after removing the second hard-mask and selectively etch back some of the gate and O/N/O.

FIG. 39I illustrates the structure after adding new O/N/O.

FIG. 39J illustrates the structure after adding new channel material such as P type poly-silicon.

FIG. 39K illustrates the structure after implant mask patterning and implantation of the S/D lines in parallel to the original S/D lines, thus forming them as N+ regions for Source/Drains.

FIG. 39L illustrates the structure after removal of the implant mask etch back polysilicon layer.

FIG. 39M illustrates the structure after adding connection forming the S/D access lines.

FIG. 39N illustrates the resulted structure of the original gate lines are now also controlling three facets of the top NOR structure with a channel each having three facets controlled by gates and with parallel access to their Source and Drains. As the same mechanism explained before, the polysilicon channel based top NOR structure can be configured to be used as multi-bit cells.

In alternative variation the structure in FIG. 39K could be processed to keep the N+ 3902 as S/D lines while removing the P− 3904 other than in the channels, resulting with double layer NOR structure which could be used as advance substrate and allow still high temperature (˜500-900° C.) for building on top of it additional circuits. Accordingly the double layered NOR 3916 could be built on silicon 2020 as illustrated in FIG. 20A over a cut porous structure 2032 as an extension of FIG. 20B. It could include a memory as NV memory fabric 3914 and a universal fabric 3912 which be used for NV memory, high speed DRAM, logic fabric and/or programmable logic fabric as was described herein.

An optional flow for this alternative is illustrated in FIG. 40A to FIG. 40D in which FIG. 40D illustrates the resulting bitlines of the N+ which is also the S/D 4002 lines. These lines could be silicidized for better conduction as the actual Source and Drain are somewhat inside 4004.

FIG. 41A illustrates the double NOR structure on porous cut layers 4102 on top of carrier wafer 4100.

FIG. 41B illustrates the structure of FIG. 41A being flipped and bonded on top of a carrier substrate 4110. The poly-silicon based NOR 4126, then on top of it the crystalline based NOR 4124, and then the cut porous layers 4102 and the donor carrier 4100.

FIG. 41C illustrates the structure of FIG. 41B after cutting off the porous and the donor carrier 4120.

FIG. 41D illustrates covering the top of the structure of FIG. 41C with O/N/O layers and gate material 4127.

FIG. 41E illustrates patterning the top gate 4130, thus substantially completing the crystalline based NOR 4124 structure and enable its channel to have four facets which may be fully ready for memory usage as discussed before.

The structure of FIG. 41E with or without the top gates 4130 could be used as advanced substrates on which additional layers of transistors and connections could be built for the construction of a multi-level functional system.

FIG. 42A illustrates such an advanced substrate. Base silicon 4202 covered with oxide on which the structure 3916 is bonded. Thus the NV memory fabric 4126 which now marked 4206 may be overlaid by a universal fabric 4124 which is now marked as 4208 covered with oxide 4210. The advanced substrate could now be used for some applications by a step of customization by etching the S/D lines of 4208 structures and deposition of a connection through 4210.

Then as illustrated in FIG. 42B a silicon layer 4212 could be transferred on top which may then be processed forming desired transistors including N type and P type to integrate with advanced substrate for the desired application. And then metal layers could be added in to finish the full end application.

FIG. 43 illustrates an alternative enhancement of the basic NOR memory cell for forming a programmable via-Inter Layer Via “ILV”. The enhancement would be applied to the starting structure illustrated in FIG. 2I. FIG. 43 illustrates the basic channel 4300 (which resembles channel 222) with side S/D 4302 and 4303 (which resemble 204) with O/N/O charge trap structure 4310 control by gate 4312 (resembling 224 and 225). For the programmable via—ILV application an additional vertical source/drain 4306 is added on top of the channel 4300, and additional vertical source/drain 4308 is added below the channel 4300. Thus, a channel that is serving a horizontal FET of an NPN (4304, 4300, 4310) transistor controlled by charge trap and gate (4310, 4312), which is also the channel of a vertical FET NPN transistor (4306, 4300, 4312). The horizontal transistor is used to program into the charge trap structure 4310 to shift the conduction characteristics of the vertical transistor forming effectively a programmable via—ILV. Accordingly the conduction between the top S/D 4306 and the bottom S/D 4308 could be programmed to be either always on, or always off or subject to the gate 4312 voltage. FIG. 44 illustrates these three operating states for which the ILV could be programmed to.

FIG. 45A illustrates the ILV programming condition to be always on ILV by having the horizontal S/D driving a programming current through the channel and the gate pull down to a negative programming voltage to load a positive (holes) charge into the charge trap layer to have the vertical transistor always on.

FIG. 45B illustrates the ILV programming condition to be always off ILV by having the horizontal S/D driving a programming current through the channel and the gate pull up to positive programming voltage to load a negative (electron) charge into the charge trap layer to have the vertical transistor always off.

FIG. 45C illustrates the structure with no charge in the charge trap layer operating as an active vertical NPN transistor with its gate positive to have the vertical NPN transistor in an on state while in FIG. 45D the gate is negative to have the vertical NPN transistor in an off-state.

In all modes the horizontal S/D could be grounded or biased to a slight potential such as 0.1V or 0.2V to make them at reverse bias to avoid sneak paths/current between ILVs arranged in an array matrix through the horizontal S/D.

FIG. 46 illustrates the structure 4630 of FIG. 2I on top of a carrying wafer 4600, the carrying wafer 4600 may include a porous cut layer and oxide similar to what is illustrated in FIG. 20B herein.

FIG. 47A illustrates the structure after forming the top S/D 4702 by selective epitaxy with N+ dopant. Alternately, the top S/D 4702 may be formed by deposition of in-situ doped polysilicon followed by planarization and etch back.

FIG. 47B illustrates the structure after deposition and planarization of a bonding oxide.

FIG. 47C illustrates the structure after flipping and bonding it to a target wafer and then lifting off the carrier wafer by cutting the porous layer.

FIG. 47D illustrates the structure after cleaning the porous residues and depositing an interlayer dielectric.

FIG. 47E illustrates the structure after opening holes to the channel locations.

FIG. 47F illustrates completing the ILV by epitaxial grow of S/D 4710 of N+ silicon completing the ILV structures. Alternately, the bottom S/D 4710 may be formed by deposition of in-situ doped polysilicon followed by planarization and etch back. Contact metal could be added for future connection for the programmable via fabric. When forming a top and bottom S/D 4702, 4710, special care should be paid to avoid direct short between S/D arranged in horizontal FET. To do this, an insulating a spacer inside of the holes may be incorporated (not shown). Alternatively, a two-step growth such as thin p-type silicon followed by highly doped N+ silicon process may be introduced.

The programmable ILV fabric 4700 could be used for many applications.

One such application could be a 3D IC system. In U.S. Pat. No. 7,960,242, incorporated herein by reference, in respect to FIG. 80 and related text and figures, a connectivity scheme has been presented to allow fine vertical connectivity while having misalignment between strata. By properly opening a via after wafer bonding and taking into account the strata misalignment. Such technique required a via process after wafer bonding and space compatible with the worst case potential misalignment in at least one direction. Using the programmable ILV fabric 4700 could enable a fine vertical connectivity without those limitations. This is illustrated in FIGS. 48A-48C.

FIG. 48A illustrates two horizontal going strips 4802 and 4804 which could have a length compatible with the potential misalignment in the horizontal direction. These strips represent part of the connection bar at the lower stratum.

FIG. 48B illustrates overlaying the lower stratum with programmable ILV fabric 4810

FIG. 48C illustrates the connectivity portion after overlaying with the upper stratum. At the bottom of the upper stratum the corresponding vertical strips 4822 and 4824 would be connected by the programmable ILV fabric to the horizontal upper strips of the lower stratum. The vertical strip could have a length compatible with the worst case potential vertical misalignment. Accordingly the corresponding horizontal strip and vertical strip should have a crossing section which could be used by the programmable ILV fabric to form the vertical connectivity. Accordingly after bonding the via 4812 could be programmed to connect the horizontal strip 4802 to the vertical strip 4822 while the via 4814 could programmed to connect the horizontal strip 4804 to the vertical strip 4824 while the other via in contact with these strips could be program to an off-state.

The bonding of the programmable ILV on top of the lower stratum could use well-known in the art hybrid bonding techniques which combines oxide to oxide bonding together with metal to metal bonding so the bonding process would also form the connection between the ILV and the strips 4802, 4804.

Logic fabrics that are customized or programmed by lithography defined via or anti-fused via are well known in the industry, such as been presented by U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,197,555, 6,331,733, 6,580,289 or 8,384,426 all are incorporated herein by reference. These teach programming logic cells and then programming interconnection fabric. U.S. Pat. No. 4,197,555 as related to FIG. 7 suggests alternating the horizontal strips between under via strips and over via strips while reversing the order for the vertical strip. In such a scheme, horizontal strips are connected by via at the strips end side to extend the routing in the horizontal direction until a change of direction is needed for which a middle strip via could be used to change the direction to the vertical direction. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,331,733 teaches an alternative scheme in which short strips are connecting by via the edges of two long strips Similar approaches have also been described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,384,426 such as illustrated in its FIG. 7. These two patents also teach additional longer tracks which periodically get connected to the short tracks. These and similar publications a teach via defined interconnect fabric and via defined programmable logics. These architectures could utilize the programmable ILV fabric 4700 for programmable connectivity fabric and programmable logic fabrics.

In a paper by Zvi Or-Bach et al titled “Modified ELTRAN®—A Game Changer for Monolithic 3D” published at IEEE S3S Conference 2015, incorporated herein by reference, techniques to construct a multi strata device were presented.

FIG. 49A illustrates a carrier wafer 4902 on which a first transistor stratum 4904 had been transferred.

FIG. 49B illustrates a programmable ILV fabric 4906 with first layer of interconnect 4907 being bonded to the structure. As is true here and many other cases herein, drawings are not made to scale and even parts of the same drawings could be made in different scale for the various implementation/descriptions. This is especially true for the presented 3D system in which layers are bonded on top of each other could be the result of very different process lines with different process rules and dimensions. Accordingly the transistors in layer 4904 could be processed in far tighter dimensions or much looser dimensions than the drawing scale indicates. A specific 3D system could be constructed based on flows described herein with far different process rules than these drawings suggest. A 3D system design is done based on the functionality desired with respective consideration of cost, power, performance, and other parameters and engineering, design, and economic considerations.

FIG. 49C illustrates adding an additional connectivity structure 4908 on the other side of programmable ILV fabric 4906 completing a programmable connectivity fabric which could utilize one of the known architectures for via defined connectivity structure.

FIG. 49D illustrates an optional addition of long track connectivity layers 4910, and an optional addition of active layer 4912 which could provide re-buffering for the routing tracks and other functions, for example, such as I/O to external devices.

Substantially the entire structure could now be flipped and bonded onto a final carrier. And connections between the circuit fabric 4904 and the programmable connectivity fabric 4906, 4908, 4910, 4912 could be made in addition to interconnection to form the designed circuits using the 4904 stratum.

An alternative peripheral circuits block diagram would now be presented for the NOR fabric such as is illustrated in FIG. 20G used with 8 bit per facet as is illustrated in FIG. 21. FIG. 50 illustrates an alternative addressing option. The address could include a block address with bits i+1 bits (B_(0-i)), Column address with j+1 bits (C_(0-j)) which selects the active bit-lines the S/D, Row address with k+1 bits (R_(0-k)) which select the active channel, Facet address with 2 bits (F₀₋₁) to select one of the 4 facet and accordingly the role of the gates surrounding the selected channel, Bit address with 2 bits (Bi₀₋₂) selecting one of the 8 bits within the facet and accordingly the voltage apply to the selected gates, and Level address with 2 bits (L₀₋₁) for optional 4 levels of charge within the selected bit. The block addressing is the higher level addressing and all portions of the device that their block is not selected would be in a non active state. Accordingly the following discussion is for an active block.

FIG. 51A illustrates the first part of the word-line/gates related peripherals circuits. Voltage source circuits 5104 are the voltage generation circuits, and may include centralized circuits including charge pumps and other power supply type circuits generating the various voltages require for the NOR memory operations including voltages indicated in the table of FIG. 22 and other tables and discussions herein. Gate signal forming circuits 5102 may include signal forming and selectors to generate the four gates signal outputs: Gr for the R-Gate of FIG. 22, Gt for the C-Gate of FIG. 22, Gl for the L-Gate of FIG. 22, and Gb which indicate the bottom gate which for many memory operations could be left floating. These signals are the functional signals as indicated in FIG. 21. These signals would be connected to the selected gate of the selected channel and would be apply based on the selected facet. The formation of these signals would be according to the memory operation if write indicted by W signal or read indicated by R signal or erase is indicated by E signal and also according to the selected bit as indicted by address signals Bi₀₋₂, FIG. 21 and the table of FIG. 22 could be used to guide the detail functions of these circuits.

The L₀₋₁ address would indicate the level of charge stored or read from the selected bit. Changing store levels could be achieved by additional write voltage levels such as 10 volts, 12 volts etc. or by modulating the writing reading time or combination of these. The Gate Signal Forming circuits 5102 unit could include the corresponding circuits to implement the bit levels.

FIG. 51B illustrates the Gate Signal Switch 5106 circuits. Its inputs are the four gate signals (Gr, Gt, Gl, Gb) and the Address bits selecting the facet—F₀₋₁. It could include decoder circuit 5108 to generate four enabling signals (e0, e1, e2, e3) of which one is active to enable selecting one of the four signals allocation 5112, 5114, 5116, 5118 to output the 4 gate signals in the proper allocation based on the selected facet to the 4 gate signal outputs: GSr, GU, GSl, Gd.

FIG. 51C illustrates the circuits to drive these centralized signals GSr, GU, GSl, Gd, to selected word-lines while all other word-line are disabled. FIG. 20G illustrates a NOR structure with active four facets. Each channel 2050 is controlled by four gates; one on Upper facet 2054, one on the Down facet 2058, one on the Right side 2056, and one on the Left side Side 2052. It should be noted that the side gates are dual function, the Right side gate of Channel 2050—channel ‘n’, is also the Left side gate of channel 2051—channel ‘n+1’. Accordingly, selection of channel ‘n’ base on the address bits R_(0-k) would select one ‘n’ Upper gate one ‘n’ Down gate and two side gates the ‘n’ Left and the ‘n’ Right gate which at could also be acting as the ‘n+1’ Left gate of the ‘n+1’ channel, as is illustrated in FIG. 51C.

The four centralized signals (GSr, GU, GSl, Gd) may be forming a bus like signal for the word-lines available to be selected for the selected channel gates. Unit 5150 could include the buffers and drive electronics. These are designed according to system considerations such as access time, power and so forth. The Row Address lines R_(0-k) and their complementary signals could be delivered as another bias like signal. For each channel a large fan-in NAND gate could be used with decoding like connection to the Row address so NAND 5130 is activated to “0” only once the Row address is addressing channel ‘n’ (respectively NAND 5129 is activated to “0” only once the Row address is addressing channel ‘n−1’). For each channel there is also a dedicated selector block—for ‘n−1’ selector block 5139, for ‘n’ selector block 5140, and for ‘n+1’ selector block 5141. Each selector block has three selectors, two are one-of-two selectors M2, and one is one-of-three selector M3. These selectors could use a full transmission gate or other switching type circuits.

For the case when channel ‘n’ is addressed NAND 5130 is activated and accordingly the selector M3 of 5140 would select GSl signal to drive gate lines related to Sn 2052, the first M2 selector of 5140 would select Gu signal to drive gate lines related to Un 2054, the second M2 selector of 5140 would select Gd signal to drive gate lines related to Dn 2058, and selector M3 of 5141 would select GSr signal to drive gate lines related to Sn+1 2056. All non-activated selectors (M2, M3) will output “0”, or be left floating in some configuration, which will prevent their respected channel to be affected by or affect the memory operations. Accordingly providing the proper signal to perform the desired operation to the addressed bit within the addressed facet on the addressed channel.

In a similar architecture the peripherals circuit for driving the bit-lines—the S/D lines could be made.

FIG. 52A illustrates the first part of the bit-lines /S/D lines related peripherals circuits. Circuits 5204 are the voltage generation circuits, those are centralized circuits including charge pumps and other power supply type circuits generating the various voltages require for the NOR memory operations including voltages indicated in the table of FIG. 22 and other tables and discussions herein. For reading bits a pulse to the S/D lines could be used and accordingly the R signal indicating a read function is an input for 5204. Circuits 5202 are signal forming and selectors to generate the two acting bit-line signals outputs: SDn for the S/Dn of FIG. 22, and SDn+1 for S/Dn+1 of FIG. 22. These signals would be connected to the selected S/D lines of the selected Column and accordingly the selected channel. The formation of these signal would be according to the memory operation if write indicted by W signal, R indicated by R signal or Erase indicated by E signal. The lower Bit address Bi₀ would affect role of Source and Drain according to the bits location on the respective facet as indicated in FIG. 21. FIG. 21 and the table of FIG. 22 could be used to guide the details of these circuits

The L₀₋₁ address would indicate the level of charge stored or read from the selected bit, this optional input for the case S/D lines are used for the level modulation.

FIG. 52A also illustrates the swapping between the S/D lines for the role of Source or Drain. While physically these lines are fixed the swapping is done electronically by enabling either buffers 5212 or buffers 5213. NBi₀ is the inversion of signal Bi₀.

FIG. 52B illustrates the circuits to drive these centralized signals SDn and SDn+1 to selected bit-lines while all other bit-lines are disabled. FIG. 20G illustrates a NOR structure with active four facets. Each channel 2070 is also controlled by the two S/D lines on its sides. The front S/Dn line 2062, and the back S/Dn+1 2064 line. It should be noted that other than the first and the last each S/D line such as 2064 affects two channels: one in front of it 2071 and one in the back of it 2070. Accordingly, selection of Column ‘n’ base on the address bits C_(0-j) would select two S/D lines which could be marked by S/Dn and S/Dn+1, as is illustrated in FIG. 52B.

The two centralized signals (SDn, SDn+1) are forming a bus like signals for the bit-lines available to be selected for the selected column. Unit 5250 could include the buffers and drive electronics. These are designed according to system considerations such as access time, power and so forth. The Column Address lines C_(0-j) and their complementary signals could be delivered as another bias like signal. For each Column a large fan-in NAND gate could be used with decoding such as connection to the Column address so NAND 5230 is activated to “0” only once the Column address is addressing Column ‘n’ (respectively NAND 5229 is activated to “0” only once the Column address is addressing Column ‘n−1’). For each Column there is also a dedicated selector block—for ‘n−1’ selector block 5239, for ‘n’ selector block 5240, and for ‘n+1’ selector block 5241. Each selector block has one-of-three selectors M3. These selectors could use a full transmission gate or other switching type circuits.

For the case when column ‘n’ is addressed NAND 5230 may be activated and accordingly the selector M3 of 5240 would select SDn signal to drive word-line to S/Dn at 5220 related to 2062, and selector M3 of 5241 would select SDn+1 signal to drive word line related to S/Dn+1 2064. All non activated selectors (M3) will output “0”, or be left floating in some configurations, which will prevent their respective channel to be affected or affect the memory operations. Accordingly providing the proper signal to perform the desired operation to the addressed bit within the addressed facet on the addressed channel.

In some configuration the M3 selector could be constructed to select between two active signals or leave the output floating which will render that line in-active.

The units 5104 and/or 5204 could be designed to provide the proper signals as was described herein for the word-line, bit-line operations of the NOR memory including such that were described in respect to FIG. 25 to FIG. 29B. Those signal could be routed to the acting S/D line and acting gate-lines using architectures as presented in respect to FIG. 51A to FIG. 52B.

An additional alternative of 2D memory fabric—Checker board Fabric—which could be used effectively for programmable logic is hereby illustrated in respect to FIG. 53A to FIG. 53F. With this alternative there is no need to use the disconnecting of the S/D line by etching as was described in respect to FIG. 31A-FIG. 31E, as with the Checker board Fabric it could be done electrically.

FIG. 53A illustrates a starting substrate 5305 which could be a bulk silicon substrate or thin silicon over oxide or over porous or other alternatives, for example, SiGe on silicon.

FIG. 53B illustrates starting substrate 5305 processed to form active regions 5300, which could be P type silicon, and after etching a grid or grids of isolation windows and forming isolation oxide, such as STI process, forming isolation regions 5302. For the benefit of the following description we could use directions as indicated by the direction arrows 5301.

FIG. 53C illustrates the structure after the formation of Y-strips in the Y direction overlaying the grid of isolation windows 5302. These strips include first an O/N/O-Y charge trap stack 5312 covered by Y-gates 5314 and then covered by hard mask 5316 which could have been used to define the Y strips, using directional etching of the deposited layers elsewhere. It should be noted that the Y strips need to be made a bit smaller than the isolation windows 5302 leaving some window edges 5311 at their sides. This is necessary to avoid that the Y-gate 5314 field penetration and disturb to the channel made along future the X-strip 5322.

FIG. 53D illustrates the structure after formation of X-strips charge trap stack 5322 and X-gate 5324 in the X direction overlaying the Y-strips charge trap stack 5312, Y-gates 5314, and hard mask 5316 forming a Checker board like channel and gate structure. The X-strips may include second O/N/O-X charge trap stack 5322 covered by X-gate 5324. It should be noted that the X strips should be made a bit smaller than the isolation windows 5302 leaving also some window edges at their sides.

FIG. 53E illustrates the structure after ion implant step to form N+ regions 5332 in all the uncovered regions of the substrate 5300. The N+ regions 5332 may be formed in the intersection regions of the active substrate 5300. These N+ regions may serve as source and drains (S/D) for the respective transistors completing the Checker board Fabric. The fabric could use junction-less transistors if the channel thickness is made thin enough, such as less than 20 nm, for which the substrate could be made from N+ silicon or P+ silicon without the need for the ion implant step for the source and drain (S/D). The substrate could be made thicker but narrow such as the body of a FinFET. The proper modification of the channel side walls could be also be used allowing the fabric to be use as a memory fabric as well. For programmable logic, use of the—Checker board Fabric—the X-gate and the Y-gate could be used to program the respective channel by charging the top surface charge trap layer based on the desired programming choice.

FIG. 53F illustrates the—Checker board Fabric of FIG. 53E by allowing view the functional layer as being virtually lifted up. The base substrate 5300 is now viewed as—like Checker board—with isolation windows 5302, P regions 5330 functioning as transistor channels. And N+ regions 5332 functioning as source drains, S/D, for these transistors. These S/D regions 5332 support programmable transistors in the X direction and programmable transistors in the Y direction. The X-Gate 5324 could be used to program the X direction transistors while the Y-Gate 5314 could be used to program the Y direction transistors. The programming of such—Checker board Fabric—could be done using NAND type programming or NOR type programming as the—Checker board Fabric—is a flexible programming fabric.

Each of these transistors could be set to one of three modes: Always ‘off’, function as transistor, always ‘on’, as was discussed herein before and conceptually illustrated in FIG. 54A-FIG. 54B.

Accordingly the programming option presented herein in respect to drawings: FIG. 32A-FIG. 37E could be applied to the—Checker board Fabric—with one change, instead of FIG. 33A being cut by etch it could be implemented electrically by programming the corresponding Y-transistor to be always off.

The—Checker board Fabric—is a more flexible programmable fabric than the 2D-NOR fabric as it includes the programmable Y-transistors enabling programming in the X direction and in the Y direction.

In a paper by L. Pileggi et al titled: “Exploring Regular Fabrics to Optimize the Performance-Cost Trade-Off” published at DAC 2003, Jun. 2-6, 2003, incorporated herein by reference, an alternative implementation for Look-Up-Table (LUT) utilizing programmable vias is presented—as illustrated in FIG. 55.

FIG. 56A illustrates the use of such LUT implementation with the Checker board Fabric which could result in a LUT4. FIG. 56B illustrates further compaction of the LUT4 implementation using the Checker board Fabric. These implementations provide significant silicon area reduction vs. the one illustrated in FIG. 35. The right side of FIG. 56A and FIG. 56B provide the symbol map used in the left side illustration of LUT4 implementation over such Checker board Fabric. The programmable fabric of FIG. 53E is flipped by transferring it over a carrier wafer. Once flipped and the backside of the NPN transistor matrix is open to allow adding gate oxide and gates over the P regions as needed and contacting the N+ the S/D regions as needed. Thereby, the front side transistor is used to program/erase (configure) the checker board while the backside transistor is used for the high performance logic functions. In this approach, the silicon substrate is needed to be fully depleted so that the front side charge trapped status affects the backside transistor characteristics. The illustration presents a section of Checker board Fabric in which channels are marked as: always on, always off, or programmable to either state or un-programmed left as acting transistor. The S/D could be connected to a ground (low voltage) or to an input or output signal. Similar to FIG. 35 the LUT4 has 4 input signals (A, B, C, D) and their complement (AN, BN, CN, DN), and one output (Out).

FIG. 56B also utilizes a programmed (P) gated transistor. Such allows the program to leave the transistor controlled by the gate signal or forcefully program the transistor to either always On or Always Off.

These implementation are just an example use of these fabrics for programmable logic, many other programmable circuits could be implemented by the presented fabrics. For example, such as the AND presented in FIG. 37.

In some applications, such as in an advanced process/device node, the N type LUT circuit illustrated in FIG. 34A and FIG. 34B and the use of the pull-up-inverter signal reconstruction circuit 3401 is less than optimal. Also the domino logic clock base reconstruction circuit 3602 could be limiting. An alternative approach could be used as is illustrated FIG. 57A. It utilizes a half PMOS latch circuit 5714. The half PMOS latch circuit 5714 would have as an inputs, the output L-Out 5722 of the first LUT 5702, which could be connection path to ground—zero signal or floating line—high resistivity, and the output L-OutN 5724 of the first LUT-N 5704, which, too, could be a connection path to ground—zero signal or floating line—high resistivity. The inputs to both LUT 5702 and LUT-N 5704 are the same input signals (A, B, C, D) and their inversion (AN, BN, CN, DN) Input circuit 5712. The two LUTs are programmed to be complementing each other so if L-Out 5722 is low (‘0’) then L-OutN is high-impedance and the inverse when L-Out 5722 is high-impedance then L-OutN is low (‘0’). Accordingly the half PMOS latch circuit 5714 converts these complementing signals to a normal logic signal Output 5726 which would be low (‘0’ also called Vss) when L-Out 5722 is low and would be high (Vdd) when L-OutN is low (‘0’).

The broken line 5710 indicate the transitions of signals from the programmable logic fabric 4208 (FIG. 56, FIG. 35, . . . ) to the upper layer CMOS fabric 4212 (in respect to FIG. 42B) carrying the CMOS circuits Input circuit 5712 and half PMOS latch circuit 5714. The structure of FIG. 57A illustrates forming a true 0/1 output using LUT of programmable N type transistor fabric. This structure indicates doubling the resource as it uses two LUTs which complement each other. But if the circuit layout would leverage the trianglular shape of these LUT circuits then the area penalty could be reduced as illustrated by FIG. 57B, in which the LUT 5708-N is flipped horizontally in respect to LUT 5706 to provide improved circuit density and compaction.

Another type of programmable logic PLA/PLD was presented in respect to FIG. 37A and could be adapted for full signal reconstruction. The following presents such in respect to the programmable Checker board Fabric as is illustrated in FIG. 58A to FIG. 58E.

FIG. 58A illustrates in its upper part a 4 NAND function AND together forming output Q, and its lower part the complementing 4 AND function forming 4 outputs (QN1, QN2, QN3, QN4), which could then OR together by a circuit such as is illustrated in FIG. 58A-3. This example is of a structure design for inputs (A, B, C, D) and with 4 product terms. The right side of these figures presents the symbol map used in the left side illustration. The structure includes at the upper side of the 8 programmable transistors connected serially to form a NAND which would be connected at their end 5800. These NAND structure are then connected together forming an AND logic of these 4 NAND function forming the output Q of the NAND side. Each of the NAND functions could be programmed to include each of the 4 inputs and/or their complements (AN, BN, CN, DN).

The lower part includes 4 programmable AND functions first AND function 5802 and second AND function 5803. For the programmable AND functions a row 5804 may be dedicated to feed the ground/Zero signal to the 8 programmable transistors structures in parallel forming the AND function. These 4 AND functions could be programmed to complement each of the upper part 4 NAND functions. These AND functions could be connected to the half latch 5844 in an OR forming circuit such as is illustrated in FIG. 58C.

FIG. 58B illustrates the structure after adding the gate control of the inputs (A, AN, B, BN, C, CN, D, DN) so the upper portion 5810 provides the 4 NAND function AND together to the programmable NAND-Out 5820, and lower portion 5812 provides the 4 AND terms forming 4 outputs first output 1 5831, second output 5832, third output 5833, and fourth output 5834. These outputs may then be connected to half latch 5844 as illustrated in FIG. 58C to construct a 0/1 logic output 5846. The broken line 5840 indicate the transition from the Checker Board fabric of the NAND product output Q 5842 and the 4 AND outputs (QN1, QN2, QN3, QN4), 5845. The 4 AND outputs are connected to the gates of 4 serially connected transistors so if they are all ‘zero’ than first transistor 5852 of the half latch will turn on forcing the half latch to output 5846 a one value. This will occur in the case that the AND side product outputs a high impedance and accordingly the other transistor of the half latch second transistor 5851 would be turned off.

FIG. 58D illustrates an alternative for the AND side of the structure. In this alternative only the first AND has a zero in its inputs. The outputs of the first AND are than fed as inputs to the second AND, and so forth all the way to the fourth NAND. This serial connection is forming the OR function of the 4 AND function as the final output QN would be zero only if the output of each of the 4 ANDs was zero. So the upper part of the 4 NAND wired AND together 5822 will output Q, while the lower part could be programmed to the complement output QN of OR of the 4 AND function. FIG. 58E illustrates adding the gates for gate control to the structure. The two complementing outputs Q and QN could be fed to a half latch circuit for bringing the outputs to full logic level outputs.

FIG. 59 illustrates a programmable 2 product term of two inputs (A, B) with output 5902. This programmable structure could be programmed to form any two input logic function and accordingly function as a LUT-2. The table in FIG. 60 presents the programming of these two NAND rows to support the LUT-2 functionality. The left side of the table shows the output function according to the two inputs ‘a’ and ‘b’ which could be the function inputs (A, B). The table shows ‘1’ for high impedance output 5902, as the high impedance output could be reconstructed to a high logic level—‘1’ by the following circuit as was discussed herein. The right side represents the programming of the respective transistors of the First NAND row 5911 under the respective gate line and respective transistors of the Second NAND row 5912 under the respective gate line. The table use the following symbol:

-   -   On—Always on     -   X—Always Off     -   T—Gate control     -   No symbol—Don't care

The LUT-2 structure could be utilized to construct higher level LUTs such as LUT-3, LUT-4 etc.

If we assume a Checker Board Fabric of equal size rectangular sized F² each, then the size of the LUT-2 illustrated in FIG. 59 could be about 4×(8+1) F². Accordingly using a similar approach as were presented herein a LUT-3 size could be about 2×4×[8+1+4] F²=104 F², and the size of LUT-4 could be about 2×2×4×[8+1+4+4] F²=272 F²

Using the same measurements the LUT-4 of FIG. 56 could be about 4×6×[6+1+4+4+4] F²=456 F²

For reconstruction the output for full logic signal using the scheme of FIG. 57 it would take two such LUT-4s.

Using aggressive compacting techniques and multilayer connections the decoder portion of these LUTs could be squeezed into smaller area as illustrated in FIG. 56B.

FIG. 61 illustrates the complementary programmable function in FIG. 59. The rows are forming NOR functions which if used on the complementary inputs of FIG. 59 would function as AND logic and hence complementing it, as was presented in respect to FIG. 58D, 58E . . . . Accordingly the structure of FIG. 61 could be programmed as a LUT-2 as well having inputs A, AN, B, BN and output 6101.

FIG. 62 illustrates a similar function for three inputs and their complement and with 4 NOR terms. The structure of FIG. 62 could be programmed as a LUT-3. And in a similar way the structure could be applied to 4 inputs 5812, as illustrated in FIG. 58D, 58E. A structure with 4 inputs (and their complement) and with 8 NOR terms (Doubling 5812) could be programmed to function as a LUT-4.

The process flow presented in respect to the 2D NOR fabric—FIG. 2A-2J utilize self alignment techniques which are well known to reduce cost and increase yield. Similar ideas could be used for the Checker-Board fabric. These are illustrated in Respect to FIG. 63A-63F.

FIG. 63A illustrates the substrate such as in FIG. 53A to form hard mask strips oriented in Y direction 6302, overlaid by hard mask strips in X direction 6304. The directions are indicated by direction arrows 6301. These two hard masks are processed with materials which could allow later removal of the X direction strips 6304 without removing the Y direction strips 6302. These hard masks could shape a Shallow Trench Isolation (“STI”) process, forming isolation in the areas/regions unprotected by these strips . . . etching the substrate (may be mono-crystalline silicon) followed by an STI process.

FIG. 63B illustrates the structure after removal of the X direction strips leaving in the Y direction strip 6312. The structure now has the isolation windows 6316, and the regions of the substrate that were protected by the X strips to be functional as the X direction channels 6318.

FIG. 63C illustrates the structure after forming the O/N/O and gate stack 6323 in the Y direction in similar process presented in respect to FIG. 2H.

FIG. 63D illustrates the structure after removing the Y direction hard mask strips 6312 and exposing the channels in the Y direction 6336. The formed O/N/O stack 6323 could include charge trap stack 6334, gates 6333 and third hard mask 6332 to protect it from following steps and provide additional isolation.

FIG. 63E illustrates the structure after forming the X direction O/N/O 6344 and its corresponding X gates 6343. The process could include ALD and other blanket depositions followed by lithography based patterning.

FIG. 63F illustrates the structure after ion implant step or other implant step (such as gas phase or PLAD) to form Source/Drain (S/D) regions 6356 in the now exposed regions of the substrate. The X direction O/N/O 6344 and its corresponding gates 6343 could be made a bit narrow to guarantee that the X channels and the Y channels are isolated by S/D region.

In some alternatives such when the channel thickness is thin, for example less than 20 nm, the device can be a junction-less transistor, then the S/D ion implantation may be modified or skipped.

The sizing of the structure and accordingly of the memory channel could be designed with consideration of access time, operation time memory durability costs and many other engineering, design and economic considerations. The NOR structure provides an interesting attribute as more memory could be added by having a higher number of layers. Processing a higher number of layers is easier, when the dimension of the patterns within the layer is relatively larger. In general the historic trend of the industry has been to make devices smaller and smaller to reduce cost per storage bit and increase memory integration. As size is reduced beyond certain level the bit storage is limited both in how much charge and accordingly how many levels could be stored in one charge trap site, and how many sites could be used on one facet without cross interference between them, also called second-bit effect (SBE). As well, retention time, reliability, and control-lines resistance and capacity (RC) are all negatively impacted. In a NOR structure the individual memory cells could be kept relatively large to achieve the desired attributes of bit capacity on a individual facet both in number of sites and how many levels are stored in each site. This achieves the desired reliability retention and access time while increasing the number of layers to increase memory integration and reduce cost per memory cell. The dimensions of length, width, and height of the memory cell channel could be designed accordingly and those could be relatively similar resulting with cube-like channels or varied to so they are very different. The formation of the O/N/O structure could be modified to enable a charge trap structure that has on its own multiple layers to allow more levels for the multilevel bit storage techniques. Some of these approaches are detailed in papers by: Ye Zhoul, et al titled “Nonvolatile multilevel data storage memory device from controlled ambipolar charge trapping mechanism published at SCIENTIFIC REPORTS|3: 2319|DOI: 10.1038/srep02319; Kyoung-Rok Han et al titled “:Multi-bit/Cell SONOS Flash Memory with Recessed Channel Structure” published at NSTI-Nanotech 2008; by Yan-Xiang Luo et al titled “Coupling of carriers injection and charges distribution in Schottky barrier charge trapping memories using source-side electrons programming” published at Semicond. Sci. Technol. 29 (2014) 115006 (8 pp); by Chun-Hsing Shih, titled “Reading Operation and Cell Scalability of Nonvolatile Schottky barrier Multibit Charge-Trapping Memory Cells” at IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 59, NO. 6, June 2012, By Zhenjie Tang et al titled “Dependence of memory characteristics on the (ZrO2)x(SiO2)1-x elemental composition” at Semicond. Sci. Technol. 30 (2015) 065010, by Jun Yong Bak Nonvolatile Charge-Trap Memory Transistors With Top-Gate Structure Using In—Ga—Zn—O Active Channel and ZnO Charge-Trap Layer” at IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, VOL. 35, NO. 3, March 2014, and U.S. Pat. No. 8,822,288 all incorporated herein by reference.

Another alternative is to utilize the NOR structure described herein for alternative storage medium such as floating gate, ReRAM, in which the O/N/O structure could be replaced by an ReRAM structure, floating gate based structure and so forth.

The structure of this NOR could be modified by changing the gate stack to construct a 3D-DRAM using the floating body technique. The Floating body of the 3D-DRAM or of the NOR Universal memory could be refreshed using the self-refresh described herein.

As a general note we described herein a memory structure and variations. There are many ways to form other variations of these structures that would be obvious to an artisan in the semiconductor memory domain to form by the presented elements described herein. These may include exchanging n type with p type and vice versa, increase density by sharing control lines, silicidation of some silicon control lines, improve speed and reduce variation by strengthening bit-lines and word-line with upper layer parallel running and periodically connected metal lines.

It will also be appreciated by persons of ordinary skill in the art that the invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. For example, drawings or illustrations may not show n or p wells for clarity in illustration. Moreover, transistor channels illustrated or discussed herein may include doped semiconductors, but may instead include undoped semiconductor material. The material used could be silicon or other alternative materials effective for semiconductor devices. Rather, the scope of the invention includes combinations and sub-combinations of the various features described hereinabove as well as modifications and variations which would occur to such skilled persons upon reading the foregoing description. Thus the invention is to be limited only by any appended claims. 

We claim:
 1. A semiconductor device, the device comprising: a plurality of memory cells; and peripheral circuits controlling said memory cells, wherein each of said memory cells comprises a first memory cell region comprising a first gate and each of said memory cells comprises a second memory cell region comprising a second gate, wherein said plurality of memory cells each comprise a channel region, a charge trap region and a tunneling region, wherein said tunneling region is disposed between said channel region and said charge trap region, wherein a portion of said peripheral circuits are designed to control said first gate and said second gate so to position two distinct memory sites within said charge trap region of said first memory cell region, and wherein said first memory cell region comprises a thin tunneling region of less than 1 nm thickness.
 2. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, wherein said second memory cell comprises a thick tunneling region of greater than 2 nm thickness.
 3. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, wherein control paths from said peripheral circuits to said memory cells comprise a junction-less transistor (“JLT”).
 4. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, wherein a portion of said first memory cell regions comprise at least one channel facet, and wherein said at least one channel facet comprises at least four charge storage locations.
 5. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: a single crystal semiconductor layer overlaying or underlying said memory cells; and a control signal path from said layer to said first memory cell region, wherein said control signal path comprises a via with a radius less than 250 nm.
 6. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, wherein said second memory cell region functions as at least one volatile floating body memory cell.
 7. The semiconductor device according to claim 1, further comprising: a plurality of volatile memory cells and plurality of non-volatile memory cells; and a controller, wherein said controller is designed to conduct a direct transfer of data from a portion of said non-volatile memory cells to a portion of said volatile memory cells.
 8. A semiconductor device, the device comprising: a plurality of memory cells; and peripheral circuits controlling said memory cells, wherein each of said memory cells comprises a first memory cell region comprising a first gate and each of said memory cells comprises a second memory cell region comprising a second gate, wherein said plurality of memory cells each comprise a channel region, a charge trap region and a tunneling region, wherein said tunneling region is disposed between said channel region and said charge trap region, wherein a portion of said peripheral circuits are designed to control said first gate and said second gate so to position two distinct memory sites within said charge trap region of said first memory cell region, and wherein a control path from said peripheral circuits to said memory cells comprises a horizontally oriented junction-less transistor (“JLT”).
 9. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, wherein said first memory cell region comprises a thin tunneling region of less than 1 nm thickness.
 10. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, wherein said second memory cell region comprises a thick tunneling region of greater than 2 nm thickness.
 11. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, wherein a portion of said first memory cell regions comprises at least one channel facet, and wherein said at least one channel facet comprises at least four charge storage locations.
 12. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, further comprising: a single crystal semiconductor layer overlaying or underlying said memory cells; and a control signal path from said layer to said first memory cell region, wherein said control signal path comprises a via with a radius less than 250 nm.
 13. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, wherein said second memory cell region functions as at least one volatile floating body memory cell.
 14. The semiconductor device according to claim 8, further comprising: a plurality of volatile memory cells and plurality of non-volatile memory cells; and a controller, wherein said controller is designed to conduct a direct transfer of data from a portion of said non-volatile memory cells to a portion of said volatile memory cells.
 15. A semiconductor device, the device comprising: a plurality of memory cells; and peripheral circuits controlling said memory cells, wherein each of said memory cells comprises a first memory cell region comprising a first gate and each of said memory cells comprises a second memory cell region comprising a second gate, wherein said plurality memory cells each comprise a channel region, a charge trap region and a tunneling region, wherein said tunneling region is disposed between said channel region and said charge trap region, and wherein a portion of said peripheral circuits are designed to control said first gate and said second gate so to position two distinct memory sites within said charge trap region of said first memory cell region.
 16. The semiconductor device according to claim 15, wherein at least a portion of said first memory cell regions each comprise at least one channel facet, wherein said at least one channel facet is influenced by at least two gates to control at least two storage locations oriented perpendicular to said at least two gates, and wherein one of said at least two gates is self-aligned to the other of said at least two gates.
 17. The semiconductor device according to claim 15, wherein said first memory cell region comprises a thin tunneling region of less than 1 nm thickness, and wherein said second memory cell region comprises a thick tunneling region of greater than 2 nm thickness.
 18. The semiconductor device according to claim 15, further comprising: a single crystal semiconductor layer overlaying or underlying said memory cells; and a control signal path from said layer to said first memory cell region, wherein said control signal path comprises a via with a radius less than 250 nm.
 19. The semiconductor device according to claim 15, wherein said second memory cell region functions as at least one volatile floating body memory cell.
 20. The semiconductor device according to claim 15, further comprising: a plurality of volatile memory cells and plurality of non-volatile memory cells; and a controller, wherein said controller is designed to conduct a direct transfer of data from a portion of said non-volatile memory cells to a portion of said volatile memory cells. 